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| WLCME |
Jonathan Trager, prominent television producer for ESPN, died last night from complications of losing his soul mate and his fiancee.
He was 35 years old and softspoken, and obsessive. Trager never looked the part of the hopeless romantic. But in the finals days of his life, he revealed an uknown side of his psyce. This hidden quasi-Jungian persona surfaced during the Agatha Christie-like pursuit of his long-reputed soul mate, a woman whom he only spent a few prescious hours with.
Sadly the protracted search ended late Saturday in complete and utter failure. Yet even in certain defeat, the courageous Trager secretly clung to the belief that life is not merely a series of meaningless accidents or coincedences. But rather, it's a tapestry of events that culminate in an exquisite, sublime plan.
Asked about the loss of his dear friend, Dean Kansky, the Pulitzer prize-winning author and executive editor of the New York Times, described Jonathan as a changed man in the last days of his life. "Things were clearer for him," Kansky noted. Ultimately Jonathan concluded that if we are to live in harmony with the universe, we must all possess a powerful faith in what the ancients used to call 'fatum,' what we currently refer to as DESTINY... |
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