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Legacy defines life beyond death

“Money is something, wealth a wonderful thing, but without love and respect for others it is a dying cruel thing.”

Photographer:Luigi Ritchie

Two members of the Franciscan Order T.O.R. passed away last month. My mother often speaks about the many services she attends as friends, relatives, and acquaintances pass on. It is always a difficult time for those who knew them.

For me, something unusual happens. A feeling of loss strikes, even when I did not know the deceased. I still feel the weight of their passing, as if something meaningful has been taken. It raises a quiet question: how can grief exist without connection? Yet it does. That sense of separation, however distant, is real.

Death is the final step in every life, marked by uncertainty, fear, and, often, a deep need for compassion. I have witnessed hundreds of end-of-life moments. Among the elderly especially, emotions vary widely: serenity and peace for some, fear and distress for others. The same questions arise again and again: What happens next? Where am I going? Will it be painful, or peaceful?

Belief systems surface sharply in these moments. Some who never held faith begin searching for it. Others who believed all their lives find themselves facing unexpected doubt. The promise of eternal life, so often spoken of, becomes intensely personal, and uncertain.

I once knew a remarkable man who was entirely alone in the world. His health was failing, and he faced a question many of us avoid: how would his life end? Would it be in unbearable pain, or through medically assisted peace? When he explored Canada’s MAID program, he made a deliberate choice about the course of his final days, one he felt was rooted in dignity, clarity, and control.

I also knew a small, frail woman nearing the end of a long life shaped by multiple health challenges. I held her hands as she began her final journey. Her senses had narrowed to sight and touch. For three hours, I spoke to her: about her family, her life, and the countless people she had impacted. When I told her how deeply she was loved, she smiled softly, closed her eyes, and passed.

Death comes for us all. It is the only true equalizer. Wealth, status, and power offer no exemption. What death leaves behind, however, is a question we must each answer: how will we be remembered?

Legacy is often misunderstood. It is not merely possessions, wealth, or even memory. Time erodes all things: names fade, monuments crumble. Legacy is something more enduring. It lives in the impact we leave behind; in the energy we contribute to others’ lives. It asks: were you guided by love, or by harm? Were you a force for justice and peace, or a source of division?

Philosophers, spiritual leaders, and thinkers have long wrestled with this idea. For some, legacy is built through service, education, and compassion. For others, it is shaped by ambition, greed, or self-interest. Both may achieve success, but the outcomes are not the same.

A priest once told me that the person with the most people at their funeral “wins.” Not as a measure of popularity, but of presence. Those who gather do so out of genuine love and respect. They come to honour a life that mattered to them.

We are all flawed. We carry regrets, weaknesses, and moments we wish we could undo. Yet none of these define us entirely. What defines us is what we choose to do next.

Death is not the final curtain. Being forgotten is. That is why legacy matters, and why it is never too late to shape it. History is filled with people who changed course, who sought redemption, and who became something greater than their past.

The greatest challenge any of us will face is not death itself, but our own reflection: our judgments, our doubts, our unwillingness to forgive ourselves.

Do not let that become your legacy.

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