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This Is the End
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A few weeks ago, on his
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public-radio program A Prairie Home Companion , Garrison Keillor spent
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several minutes conversing with the occasional character Larry, his fictional
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twin brother, who lives beneath the stage and harbors resentments about a
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show-business career that slipped away. "Larry, you can't live in the past,"
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Keillor said at one point. "It does no good to hold a grudge. You've got to
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move on, Larry. You've got to find closure."
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A
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Prairie Home Companion does not rely for its comedic grammar on concepts
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accessible mainly to an overinformed urban elite, so when certain words and
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phrases crop up on that program, you can be pretty sure the underlying meanings
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have been suffused through the middle-range ZIP codes. Such is the case with
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closure , in the sense of bringing an emotional process to its natural
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conclusion. The term has so rapidly evolved from restricted jargon into
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mainstream patois--it is hardly more "technical" now than the words du
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jour after soup on a truck-stop menu--that A Prairie Home
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Companion cannot only use it safely, but can even give it a knowing, ironic
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twist.
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Closure has familiar applications in the realm of personal
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relationships. In the movie Heat , to cite just one instance, Diane
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Venora says to her ex-husband, Al Pacino: "I may be stoned on grass and Prozac,
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but you've been walking through our life dead. And now I have to demean myself
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with Ralph just to get closure with you." But the word turns up in any sort of
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story where "finis" is being written. Patients who served as unwitting subjects
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of 1950s radiation experiments described their recent settlement with the
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government as bringing "a sense of closure," using the word in its by-now
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standard noun-phrase setting. ( Closure on its own sometimes seems
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too final.) The makers of a $450 doll that bears the features of a young
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Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis attributed the doll's popularity to the public's
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"unresolved feelings about Jackie": Buying a doll "gives them a sense of
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closure." In contrast, the rambling valedictory press conference last fall of
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Notre Dame's football coach, Lou Holtz, was criticized by one sportswriter for
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its "absence of any real sense of closure."
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Closure is nowadays
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most often encountered in contexts involving death. Newspaper and broadcast
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accounts routinely describe the return of a serviceman's long-lost remains from
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the Pacific, Korea, or Vietnam as bringing a sense of closure. Late last year,
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the Los Angeles Times profiled a local undertaker named Roberto Garcia:
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"While the profits are nice, Garcia says the most fulfilling part of his job is
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helping families establish a sense of closure." Now that executions are once
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again a normal part of American life--someone is executed in the United States
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once a week, on average--they, too, reliably bring on that clausural feeling.
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"What I'm hoping is that everyone will have a sense of closure from this," a
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police officer told a reporter after an execution was carried out last month in
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Arizona, 18 years after the crimes had been committed. Commenting on a
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documentary in which parents witnessed the execution of the killer of two of
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their children, a Chicago Sun-Times columnist wrote: "Watching him die
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gave them a sense of closure." The relatives of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
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Goldman did not witness anything so dramatic, but according to the New York
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Times , closure was what they, too, had sought in their recent lawsuit
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against O.J. Simpson. The $33.5 million award was not the issue, they told the
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Times : "Rather ... they were looking for closure--'justice,' some called
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it--to the worst thing that had ever happened to them."
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The
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origins of closure are hardly obscure. It is derived from the Latin verb
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clausere , meaning "to close," which also gives us the enclosed
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architectural space cloister , the enclosed syntactical space
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clause , and the fear of enclosed space altogether,
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claustrophobia .
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In a political sense, closure , now most
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commonly invoked in its Gallic variant, cloture , refers to the ending of
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debate in a legislative body and dates back to the late 19 th
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century. In literary criticism, closure refers to the manner in which a
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poem (or any text) achieves thematic and structural finality. In the
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psychological jargon of Gestalt theory ("Gestalt" being German for "pattern" or
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"form"), closure refers to the propensity of the human mind to impose or
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perceive order despite gaps or asymmetry. This meaning of closure helps
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to explain ___ most people have no ________ at all in figuring out the missing
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______ in this sentence. Fill-in-the-blanks exercises have been fashioned into
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what are known as cloze tests , which are designed to test passages for
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readability and readers for comprehension. The Gestalt term closure has
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an application in the world of , where it refers to the way the reader mentally
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imagines what has happened between panels.
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The
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impulse behind the real-life quest for a sense of closure--the impulse, that
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is, to discern meaning, to impose coherence, to tie up loose ends--is no doubt
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as timeless as sentience itself. But how did it come to be so closely bound up
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with a specific word? One factor is the psychologizing of everyday life, a
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development that scarcely needs documentation. When we require words to
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describe personal motivation and other interior processes, the most likely
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source today is psychology. The lexicon so derived is large and growing:
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co-dependency , recovery , denial , self-esteem ,
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self-help . As it has been noted, there are no longer sins, only
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syndromes.
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Asecond factor is the news media, in particular local
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television news, which is built on abbreviated human stories with a
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recognizable beginning, middle, and end: A violent crime. A daring rescue. A
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belated discovery. A sudden disaster. Psychotherapeutic templates are easy to
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apply. The words "a sense of closure" have by now been uttered so often on
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camera--along with the companion phrase "the healing process," which is what
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observers hope will occur after the scab of closure has formed--that they have
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joined the off-the-rack vocabulary of stock phrases that ordinary Americans can
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pick from when a camera appears in front of them.
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How much more deeply a sense
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of closure will penetrate is impossible to say--but that it will go deeper is
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without question. I won't be surprised to learn someday that wedding vows are
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being exchanged in which the union is set to last "until a sense of closure do
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us part." And surely, "A Sense of Closure" will be the headline above the news
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analysis in the New York Times the morning before the asteroid hits.
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At least we won't have to
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read "The Healing Process" on the editorial page the following day.
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