Do You WANT to Die? Do You Have A Right To Die?
by Karl Loren

There Are Experiences
Worse Than Death!
Do You WANT to Die? Do You Have
A Right To Die?
As you go through life, perhaps talking to people about
becoming an Associate for The Way To Happiness Foundation International
Associate Program, you will find people who are trying to die -- who want to
die. Are you surprised at this? There are many of them.
Some of them are sick in bed -- obviously in poor health.
But some are walking around pretending to be happy and productive.
When you learn how to do this, you can detect this
consideration in some people -- they are not much worth trying to interest
in the Associate Program.
There are TIMES when the "desire for death" is the most
rational thing a person can wish for. Be prepared, personally and
emotionally, to accept this when it IS rational.
I had been wanting to write this article for a long
time! It was first written about an event in 1996, as a "Viewpoint"
article. It is now brought to the subscribers of The Wednesday Letter.
This is a true story.
Do you, or does anyone, have a right to die? Can anyone
interfere with that right? Do you have a duty to die? When does your
time to die come? Whatever does that word time
mean, there?
For some time now I've been living through an experience
with my mother-in-law. There was so little chance that she would ever read
this while she was still alive that I published it in a different form, some
years ago. So I bluntly describe the exact facts of the situation, even
though I won't mention full names.
The names in this story are Bonnie, my wife,
Mom (Dorothy) my mother-in-law, Howard, Bonnie's brother and Bill
(who became a companion to Mom).
Mom!
Mom had been a fine mother-in-law in my
married life -- for more than 20 years. My wife's brother, too, and his
kids, were fine family members -- even though we would probably never see
eye-to-eye on many matters, particularly including health care, diet and
vitamins!
So, my wife, Bonnie, and I would go visit Mom, Dorothy,
regularly. And she would occasionally come visit us.
After the death of her second husband, she found a great
friendship in a 40-year family friend who, likewise, was then without a
companion.
The New Man -- At 83!
At first, as they "dated" -- she was, you know, 83 years
old -- they worried about how the kids would view this new
relationship. We all encouraged them to live together and offer as much love
to one another as they might wish. We children, and even the grandchildren,
could see no fault for Dorothy seeking a loving relationship at her age. She
had, after all, great grandchildren she could still love and enjoy!
She had moved in with her new/old friend, Bill.
Mom sold her home, and most of her furniture. She had expected to live the
rest of her life with her new "companion." She had also mentioned, several
times, that she wanted to die before he did. She could not face the
possibility that she might survive THREE men.
And he, that old family friend who had taken this new
role in her life, was so obviously good for her that all the rest of the
family applauded her moving in with him. They traveled together in his motor
home, and even made plans for cruises and other trips.
So, Mom led a reasonably busy life -- traveling around
the country, spending her built-up estate carefully so that it would
certainly last her through many more years of comfortable living in this new
relationship. He too, you see, was not affluent, but very comfortable with
his pension and estate.
By no means were either of these two senior citizens
anywhere close to the poverty line!
Discussions Of
Inevitable Death
As a family we had not been without discussion of the
matter of death or disability.
Mom expressed, often and pointedly, that she did
not want to "linger." She had, as a young mother, her own mother who spent
more than 20 years rotating among the eleven of her living children, living
with first one, then another, for a month or so. Grandmother Snow, as
her children and grandchildren referred to her, was very helpful during
those visits -- working in the kitchen and with cleaning. Up to the day she
died, at 93, she was still contributing more to the life of any home than
she took from it.
In any event, Mom didn't ever want to become a
charge on HER kids. She had, in the manner of many later generations of her
Mormon heritage, only two kids, not twelve as had her mother. And, her two
kids were busy and active in ways that she and her brothers and sisters had
not been when Grandmother Snow came to live for a while.
Grandmother Snow lived in an era where the woman of the
family did not have an outside job. Bonnie's era has most of the women
working!
So, as Mom got older, still in
excellent health, she would often say to Bonnie, my wife:
"I Do Not Want To Linger!"
When I die I want it to be fast. I don't want to
linger. Promise me you will never allow them to keep me alive by sticking
tubes down my nose and throat! Don't allow them to use "heroic" efforts to
keep me alive.
I don't ever want to be a burden on my children, as my
mother was on us!
She
even put some of this into writing -- in her "living will" and her "power of
attorney" where she made it clear that whoever was to start making
health-related decisions for her, if that became necessary, was not to allow
any extraordinary medical procedures to maintain her life if, without those
procedures, she could not live.
It was actually much more carefully and legally stated,
since the State of California, like many states, gets doctors and hospitals
off the liability hook by providing pre-proven legal documents for model
power of attorney forms. Mom signed one of those and
both her kids were not only witnesses but were in full agreement.
That, as you'll see, was an intellectual agreement during
the analytical time of thinking about the matter -- not a time of stress
when a dying, or even just-dead, mother might, or might not, be a candidate
for some dramatic life revitalizing medical procedure.
It was also a time when Mom couldn't
conceive of anyone being closer to her than her two children.
Alas! She took a new love (Bill)
into her life -- a man who we all thought would be wonderful for
Mom. But, he, for his own reasons, was NOT the right one to make
health-care decisions for our Mom!
So, life continued, with no cloud on any horizon. We knew
she wouldn't live forever, but it seems that older people don't get worse
gradually. They do giant and unexpected jumps downward!
They are doing fine one day, and the next there is an
"event!" It might be a stroke, or a "discovered lump" or a fall. Whatever it
may be, it is usually sudden and unexpected.
What Does "Old" Mean?
One of the definitions of "older," I suppose, is that you
don't recover from these events as quickly as younger
people do.
So, Mom had one of those events!
It happened, sadly enough, in March, 1995.
Mom was feeling dizzy. She actually fell
when she got out of bed to go to the bathroom one night. She didn't hurt
anything -- just a small bruise. But, she stumbled in the semi-dark, fell
against the bed, and the next day she realized that she just wasn't as
steady on her feet as she used to be. (She was willing to use our calcium,
and got good results, but Bill didn't believe in
vitamins much, and Mom wouldn't take our oral chelation formula!)
The Next Event!
The next event in this series was in September, 1995,
also not very dramatic. Mom awoke one morning, while she was living with
Bill, and she started wandering around the house -- disoriented.
Bill
found her wandering in the house, not knowing where she was. It was like
she had wandered into a "black hole" in space.
It was a terrible shock to Bill, particularly because of
Bill's personal situation with regard to his own wife.
Bill decided that Mom should go to the Emergency Room of
the local hospital. Notice how someone has taken over making health care
decisions for Mom -- someone who Mom loved and trusted, but nonetheless, how
son and daughter were moved out of the loop.
Hospitals will generally always do the exact procedure
which provides the greatest amount of income. The costs in an emergency
room, of course, are enormous, and patients are charged full-rate when the
insurance will cover it.
Mom's insurance was one of the best!
After a couple thousand dollars of emergency room care
the hospital decided that Mom needed a stay in the hospital -- to handle
what they called had been a mini-stroke and some unknown problem that needed
lots of (expensive) tests.
They said that there was no damage to the heart, but that
there had been a mini-stroke and that she would need time and care to
recuperate!
Finally, the doctor told us that Mom needed a
gall-bladder operation -- that her gall-bladder was not working properly,
and was putting toxins into her body.
Now, at 83 it's a very serious event to have such major
surgery. Bonnie and I were strongly opposed to such surgery, feeling that
there would be many more natural alternatives to this problem -- and having
a long-standing suspicion of the opinions of doctors.
Nonetheless, with Bill's urging for standard care, Mom
had the surgery.
After some period in recovery, Mom was ready to go
"home." Now, the question began to surface -- where was her home?
She had sold her home, moved in with a man she loved, and
he was starting to have second thoughts about his promise to care for her.
And why not. If you've read the Endnote
about Bill, you'll realize what a terrible strain HE was under about this.
She did go back to his home, but it was increasingly
clear that she was no longer able to take care of herself.
She was often disoriented and confused. Bill found that
he could not leave her to herself, for fear that she would come to some
harm. He had to help her with her bathing and toilet!
There
was no event for the next change in her living situation. Abandonment!
A little baby, abandoned, probably doesn't even realize
that she has been abandoned -- but an 83 year old woman? She knows!
After several months of trying to handle the situation,
Bill let us all know that it wasn't going to work. He couldn't continue to
care for Mom. Bill's kids, too, felt far more concern about him than Mom,
and urged him to get out from under the responsibility.
So, there we were with a Mom who could no longer fully
take care of herself. She certainly didn't need any full-time nurse, nor a
hospital setting, but neither was she ever again to run a home, cook for
herself, do any cleaning, or care for herself in any meaningful way.
She was also about to be forced out of the home with the
man she loved! Is this not worse than death?
So, the painful decision was made that Mom should move in
with Brother!
Remember that Mom had already made a powerful decision to
die -- when her second husband died, Mom didn't want to live.
Bill had come around as a new possibility of a happy
life, but her second postulate, also powerful, was that she should never
again suffer the pain of losing a loved one -- that she should die before
anyone else close to her.
Now, with Bill very close to her, and her strong decision
that she didn't want to "lose" Bill, what do you suppose would be the effect
of removing her from his loving care and putting her into a spare bedroom at
her son's home!
You see, there is something worse than death -- that is
living in an old, damaged body when you truly don't want to be there.
A Time For Testing Relationships!
The man she had been living with had not anticipated that
he would suddenly be cast in the role of a full-time day nurse! There was no
room in his short, even though intense, relationship with Mom for him to
take on an
in sickness and in health
relationship! Perhaps he would have married her, but because of his unusual
marital situation, he could not -- so he never took that pledge!
He had his own family, his own life, his own future, even
at his 78 years of age! He had a family of kids and grandkids, and his
health was excellent.
With one event of dizziness Mom had lost, forever (?) her
future of traveling with the man she now loved. What was left to her other
than the original decision to die? Believe me, when the spirit decides to
die, only the spirit (not a doctor) can reverse that process. A doctor can
force the spirit to stick around, in a terribly ill body, but life and
health must start with a spiritual decision.
Mom had made that decision, and the removal of Bill from
her life returned her to that decision, with ferocity. It was just as if she
had now lost the third man in her life -- exactly what she had vowed would
never happen!
Those can be, as you will understand, very trying times.
Who Else Can Talk Or Decide? But You!!
Brother and Sister spent some hours, in this very
stressful setting, thinking and talking about

what to do with Mother?
Despite Mom's very strongly held conviction that she
never wanted to become a burden on her kids, it was obvious that she had now
become the charge of one of her children.
While Mom's money would pay for a few years of that
private nursing home, the family couldn't confront that arrangement.
The Question You Don't Want To Answer!
How could you ever, for the Sake Of God, send your own
Mother into a HOME!
Mom, after all, was usually quite coherent. She had lost
a bit of her memory of recent things, but generally was mentally not much
different than before. She was just physically disabled.
Your situation could be a bit different, the same, or
very different, but the components of YOUR situation would probably include
each of the elements I've so-far described.
So, she moved into one of the empty-nest bedrooms of
Bonnie's brother. He was retired anyway, while his wife was still working.
He had been staying at home, being a house-husband, and enjoying his
retirement. Mom had, but hated, a wheelchair. She had, but refused to use, a
walker.
Bonnie, a bit younger than her brother, and much more
active in business, couldn't take over a full-time caregiver's role for her
mother.
So, the very unpleasant decision was faced and handled.
Brother became mother to his mother.
Son Becomes Mother To The Mother!
Mom moved into one of the empty down-stairs bedrooms in
her son's home.
Mom could still walk, go to the bathroom by herself, and
generally participate in the family life. She certainly didn't need to be
bathed or fed by someone else. Then!
But, you know how those "events" occur! That physical and
mental condition often changes in big jumps, and we had another of those
jumps coming!
She had been living with her son for only two weeks.
Bonnie traveled the 50 miles, one way, down to see her twice during those
weeks, and spent several hours. It was a terribly emotional time for all
concerned.
Mom, during these two visits, had discussions with Bonnie
about death. She was in full recall of her earlier decisions and desires as
regards being a burden on her family She was not at all happy with the
present arrangement. She told Bonnie she just wanted to die! She could not
envisage herself getting "better."
Mother's Day
1996
Mother's Day. Bonnie had gone to visit her
mother on the Saturday before Mother's Day, 1996. Then, the next day,
Sunday, Mother's Day, Bonnie and I went to breakfast with some of our own
children.
By this date Mom had actually been living with her son
for only two weeks!
We got home to the terrible news that Mom had had a heart
attack that morning, and had been taken to the Emergency Room of her local
hospital. That was all we knew at first. We didn't know, on the first call,
of the strange events inside the ambul ance!
Bonnie and I went to the hospital immediately, and spent
those anxious hours waiting for the news.
The verdict was that she had had a full-fledged heart
attack and was not now conscious.
Then we got the REAL news.
Actually, she had started to feel hot, and had some pain
in her chest; Brother was worried enough to call for an ambulance. It
happened that Bill was visiting at just that time. Even though he no longer
wanted to LIVE with her, he was still spending time visiting her.
Those were emotionally wrenching visits, too. Mom
loved Bill. Bill loved Mom. But, after every one of Bill's visits, Mom
would spend a long time crying!
Why not! The man she loved had "visited" and then left
her (again)!
Brother and Bill got her into the ambulance and Bill rode
with her while Brother took his car to follow to the hospital.
It Happened In The Ambulance!

Now, Bill knew full well, and had no disagreement, that
Mom wanted no heroic efforts to save her life. But, he hadn't faced the
possibility that he would find himself in the role of a "health care
decision maker."
Mom had a massive heart attack IN THE AMBULANCE. Could
the sirens have contributed to that?
The ambulance paramedics are very well trained for such
events; they all carry those infamous electric paddles used to shock someone
back to life when their heart has stopped!
Mom died in that ambulance. Her heart had stopped beating!
Only two weeks after she had "lost" her new love, she was
finally able to implement her decision to die.
I don't have any doubt about your spiritual ability to
cause your own body to live or die. Spiritual decisions are very powerful.
The paramedic instantly, and automatically, started to
get the paddles ready.
Now, Bill was very emotional at this point. After all,
the woman he had grown to love had died in his arms, and the paramedic was
about to bring her back to life.
Can You Deny A Loved One's Last Wish? To Die!
Bill knew, full well, that Mom didn't want heroic
treatment, but what would YOU do in this situation?
Here is one of the center points of this entire article
-- how can you take the decision made in a time of rational thought, and be
sure it is implemented at a time of emotional distress.
It's one thing to wonder how you, yourself, might react
if you were conscious and faced with the decision on allowing administration
of heroic care to yourself. But, try to cast yourself in the role of a
husband, loving friend, or a family member, who knows the dead one's wishes,
but also knows that this little procedure might return his loved one to
life!
How would you behave in those circumstances?
Bill made no effort to stop the paramedics.
They applied those electric shock paddles and brought Mom back to life!
In their Book Of History, I'm sure, the paramedics
are proud of the number of life-saving procedures they administer.
Little do they realize the terrible damage this procedure
does to LIFE!
Back From The Dead!
Yes,
Mom now was again alive! But, so is a vegetable alive!
Mom was in terrible condition. She had some sort of a
small event, at her son's home, and then a massive event in the ambulance.
Then, in the emergency room of the hospital there were
more heroic efforts to salvage this frail 83 year old body in the name of a
society that values living vegetables more highly then death in dignity! She
was unconscious for two days. She actually stayed in the intensive care ward
at the hospital for two weeks before she could be moved to the regular ward.
She actually spent only three days there before the doctors were ready to
ship her off to a convalescent hospital.
(The number of days here, or there, have mostly to do
with insurance coverage and non-medical bookkeepers making decisions aimed
at reducing costs and maintaining profits!)
How Responsible For Her Condition Was Mom?
This
was, incidentally, an 83 year old body that had smoked much of her life, had
refused to take vitamins even though we offered them freely, and never ever
questioned the wisdom of the doctors who had treated her with drugs over
many years.
She had, for instance, watched her second husband die
when we told her that the cancer treatment she thought was best for him was,
actually, the cause of his death, rather than the cancer. At our insistence
she did travel to my friend's
clinic in Mexico -- a man who could have reversed the cancer in this
man's body. But he visited, refused, left, and soon died.
She, like much of America, had placed her faith in the
modern medical model which says that drugs and doctors know best, and
children, vitamins and alternative methods are to be graciously ignored!
She had paid into the system many thousands of dollars
for her health insurance, and if insurance wouldn't cover some treatment,
then she knew that such treatment was inherently inappropriate.
Her insurance payments, or those made on her behalf,
didn't begin to be used up by her medical needs. Some of her unused
insurance money went to pay for some crack-addicted teenager whose
fatherless baby cost hundreds of thousands of dollars for many months in
intensive care, only then to be abandoned!
Click here for the typical horror story.
We were there in minutes, of course, and spent more
anxious hours at the hospital. Finally, she was conscious and we could see
her -- it was a few days later. During that time it was always clear that
she would "live," but it was never clear at all what quality that "life"
would have.
At the hospital, in intensive care, we didn't know
whether or not she would ever regain ANY ability to talk or walk. Gradually
she "came around," and we figured that her almost total loss of memory was a
temporary phenomenon.
First Glimmer Of Things To Come!
She
knew who Bonnie was, and me too, but after a minute of being with Bonnie,
she would repeat some question which had just been asked, and answered, a
minute before. It was not at all clear that she could ever have any
semblance of normal living!
From the top of the mountain you can see for many miles!
From this situation we could see easily and accurately into Mom's future --
it was bleak!
At first we didn't know how long she would be in the
hospital, and we hadn't even considered what would happen if they wanted to
put her in a lesser-care facility. How much would it cost? Would insurance
cover? Could she ever go back to live with her son?
Fortunately, we didn't have to get answers to all those
questions immediately. The hospital had it all planned for maximum efficient
utilization of the insurance dollar.
The hospital gave her very intensive "therapy" and
insisted that she must be able to walk, and sit on a toilet without help.
Then, they said, she could be discharged to the next level of care -- the
convalescent hospital.
She went from the hospital to a convalescent hospital
where, we were firmly told, the insurance would pay for only 100 days. The
full expectation was that she would leave that facility shortly and live
with family! She stayed at this new hospital for two weeks while they
trained her to dress herself and take care of some simple body needs.
That's the law now-a-days! You get insurance for the
catastrophic treatment. They turn you into a mobile invalid, and give you
the choice of a private "home" at about $4,000 to $6,000 per month, or
living with some relative.
What Is The Role Of The Government In Your Mom's Dying?
It appears to me that the system is currently designed to
keep a body alive at almost all costs -- no matter how much of a vegetable
the person may be!
I read a very well-written opinion colu mn
in my local newspaper recently, about this situation. The writer presented a
story like that above, but concluded that the "solution" had to be an
improved medical insurance coverage that would allow the disabled person to
get unlimited home care, or convalescent hospital care, with full insurance
coverage. The home care would be fully paid for visiting nurses, and the
convalescent hospital care would be for the rest of a person's life, not
just 100 days!
What a terrible thought it is that the system would be
modified to give doctors and hospitals even more incentive to turn fine
living people into money-making vegetables! But, I'll get to this cynical
view in a bit!
Fortunately! The cost of such stupid coverage would be
so obviously high that no government could stand for it.
So, we visited her in the hospital just about every day.
It was a 100 mile round-trip drive for Bonnie, but during those first few
days there was no possibility that she wouldn't go every day.
I went a couple days, then begged off!
So, as we were all looking at the possibility of 100 days
at this facility, it also became clear that the hospital was well-governed
by the insurance provider, and they were NOT allowed to keep her for those
100 days unless it could be proven that she couldn't go home.
Their job was to get her UP to a condition where she was
no longer eligible for the convalescent hospital, because the criteria had
been set so that when a living vegetable could also walk and take care of
her own potty needs, it was time to leave.
In other words, the convalescent hospital was only, at
least with this insurance, a place where someone must require more care than
Mom required.
We
were dizzied by the speed with which we found that in a week or two, she
would be on the doorstep of that hospital -- ready for the next place. The
next place could be a return to Brother's home, or a brand new experience in
a private nursing home.
Here wrinkled hands told the story!
Mom had managed her life for more than 80 years -- coming
to a comfortable time when she had no debt, money in the bank, a paid-for
home, loving family, in good enough health to travel and enjoy life. From
that point, in three more years, she had become a living vegetable ready to
be a tremendous burden on her family, and on society.
What a way to depart some 80 years of independent and
resourceful living!
We were certainly not at all prepared to change Mom's
life that much -- to take her to a private home!
Back Home To A New Situation!
So, back to her son's home she was destined to go.
But,
now she was a very different person.
First, she was often confused. She would talk sensibly
for a minute, and then switch to an unrelated subject, and then ask some
question showing that her memory of ten minutes earlier was gone!
Perhaps you have known someone like that?
Brother was now faced with the need of helping his own
mother take off her panties so she could sit on the toilet. The hospital
only required that she should be able to SIT on the toilet without help!
Yes, being capable of using the toilet did NOT require
that she be able to undress herself!
And, Brother was now faced with having to give his own
mother a shower!
When Is The Last Time You Helped Your Naked Mother Take
A Shower?
Have you ever considered taking your mother, or
father, opposite sex, at the age of 80+, naked into a shower???
Bonnie and Brother decided to get a part-time visiting
nurse. (Euphemistically, they are called custodial
nurses!)
The nurse was a great gal! She had experience in these
situations and took over all the responsibilities during the few hours per
week that she was there. She smiled a lot and made Mom happy!
Now, you can see that the situation has developed very
naturally into a basically intolerable arrangement.
That was the situation at the time when Brother reminded
Bonnie that he had a long-standing two-week family vacation planned, and
prepaid. So it was that Mom came to live with Bonnie and me for two weeks.
I have certainly learned quite a bit from this experience
-- among other things it gave me the impetus to finish writing this article
-- on a subject I've been wanting to address for a long time.
While Mom was here she did very well, within the
parameters of wellness that would ever be possible for
her to achieve.
They Soak Up All The Attention You Can Give!
She
cried a lot, and laughed a lot, but mostly she soaked up all the time,
attention and care that Bonnie could provide.
We had a visiting custodial nurse (I still can't get used
to that term!!) come in EVERY day, even if for only for four hours.
So, Mom had two very nice weeks with us -- sitting with
our dogs, enjoying the view, having an attentive nurse, and a caring
daughter.
We had a microphone by her bed, with the speakers next to
ours. We could hear her breathing during the night -- attentive to any
change that might mean we must rush downstairs to revive her, somehow.
She cried when it came time to go back with her son. We
softened that change by arranging that Brother would bring her to our home
regularly to stay for a night or so, and then back to his home.
Brother, Too?
Oh,
I didn't tell you, while Mom was in the hospital after the ambulance event,
one of her brothers, at 78, suffered a massive heart attack and wound up
with partial paralysis. He seemed quite mentally alert, and could walk and
move all but one paralyzed arm. But, he couldn't move his throat muscles. He
couldn't swallow. So, he had tubes down his throat to feed him. HE was in a
hospital setting -- no simple nursing home would do for him.
While Mom was staying with her son, Bonnie and Brother
discussed whether they should tell Mom about her younger brother, and
decided against it. It's amazing how many decisions you are faced with --
decisions you've never anticipated. Should you, or should you not, tell
Mom about her brother?
But, by the time Mom got to be living with us, Bonnie
began to see some things very differently.
For instance, Bonnie decided that it was not morally
right for her to prevent Mom from knowing about her own baby brother. Bonnie
told Mom, and then arranged for a visit between the two of them.
That was, as you would expect, a very emotional meeting.
They certainly both were sufficiently aware to know who
they were meeting, and to know the condition of each of them. Mom, sitting
in her wheelchair (she hated having to use it), talking with her baby
brother, now 78, and both of them crying a lot. Her brother, of course,
couldn't talk, but they could hold hands and Mom could talk.
Mom talked about it for days afterwards. It's an
interesting observation that Mom usually couldn't remember something that
had happened the day before, but she had no trouble remembering her visit
with her brother, and she also had some future interest now.
She definitely wanted to go back to visit more with her
brother. Coming, as she did, from a family of 12 children, only five of whom
were then alive, you can guess that Mom had some important cycles to finish
up with a brother who she normally only visited a couple times per year. As
I recount below, one of the most important things an older person wants to
do is to finish up any undone things from a whole lifetime.
While you may have an absolute right to die, you will
find that it is very difficult to die when you feel that you have unresolved
conflicts, or promises you've given and haven't met. A person wants to leave
this life feeling that they have ended the things they started.
Mom's visit with her baby brother was an important part
of her letting go of the responsibilities of this life.
So, Bonnie discovered that it was a very good decision to
be very open and frank with her Mom.
Once, Mom said: "I must be a pain in the butt to you!"
Bonnie, without hesitation, said "Yes!", because that was the truth. Mom
tended to demand all of Bonnie's time, but Bonnie often told her that Mom
would have to sit by herself for a while, ‘cause Bonnie had some of her own
life to lead.'
What we've found is that Mom could accept the truth of
situations far better than we had expected.
As you'll see below, Bonnie was very upset with Bill
for allowing Mom to be brought back to life when Mom had specifically asked
that such heroic efforts NOT be used. We were all the more convinced of the
mistake that had been made when we discovered that the electric paddles had
acted almost as destructively as that most evil treatment of psychiatry --
electro-convulsive therapy -- ECT.
Some
day I'll write about this evil, and its origin. But, enough to be said here
that when massive electricity is applied to the body, the body may, somehow,
recover to breathing, but the mind is always badly affected.
Doctors may claim that it was the heart attack itself,
that caused Mom to become so incoherent. But, I know that the massive
application of electricity to her body shocked her into a past time of her
life; she was caught up and stuck in that moment of the past.
It was a confused existence for her.
She actually changed from time to time, as to what part
of her life she was re-experiencing. But, she'd go from an instant when she
was 23 years old to an event when she was 53, and then since nothing in her
immediate environment matched the reality of those past incidents, she would
get confused.
I could write more about this, but it really doesn't make
any sense to try to make sense out of nonsense!
Mom was probably not at the level of response that would
get her graded as mentally incompetent, or senile, but if you've ever been
around someone like this, you know, too, that they are not completely in
charge of their own mental faculties!
Mom would sometimes forget where the bathroom was.
So,
Mom had been revived from the dead, against her wishes, to start a new life
in the midst of a confusion of past memories, each of which seemed as real
as the chair she sat upon. (The current movie, 2001, Vanilla Sky, is about
just such a confusion of realities and non-realities!)
Of course a conversation with her was upsetting!
Well, that's the end of the story for a while. She went
back with Brother, and then visited our home regularly. Brother, using Mom's
money, had taken our suggestion to hire a full-time live-in custodial nurse
at less cost than the nursing home.
Bill never came around while Mom was living with us. He
did visit her at her son's home, but Mom would cry for several hours after
he left. No wonder! She loses her third man over and
over again.
But, one of these days we knew another event would
occur, and Mom would either leave this painful existence, or drop down a
notch or two on the scale of living vegetables.
Now, don't get me wrong, about living vegetables.
Even then I had absolutely no doubt that Mom could return
to a very good state of health.
As much as I've written and lectured about intravenous
chelation therapy, and oral chelation vitamins, Mom would never consider
getting such treatments.
Oh, she might have been willing if Bill had suggested it,
but her daughter's opinion on such a matter was certainly not to be regarded
as valid along with the opposing opinions of the white-coated murderers in
the hospitals she visited.
Bill was polite about our suggestions that he
encourage Mom to go for I/V Chelation therapy. But, he didn't "believe in
it." She would have listened to him, but he would not speak that truth!
So, we know she could have been helped, and could still
be helped.
You must want help. Help is not something that can be
effectively forced upon you -- despite what doctors and hospitals believe
and practice!
The Decision To Die Is A Very Powerful Decision!
Here is another of the central points of this article:
When someone has decided to die, they will succeed!
It was very painful for Mom to lose her first husband to
cancer. He lingered on, causing Hell to the family while he died slowly and
terribly.
She then remarried, several years later, and had a happy
20 years, but then watched her second husband die of cancer -- while
refusing to listen to our strong urgings that he refuse the terrible
chemo-therapy and radiation which, we are sure, actually killed him.
So, as Mom had said many times to Bonnie, she didn't want
to outlive any other man she might take up with. She wanted to go quickly
when her time was up, and she didn't want to burden her children with her
care.
Those were strong and sane decisions, reached when she
was quite rationale. Undoubtedly you know someone who has made such
decisions. Perhaps YOU have made such decisions!
Now that the electric paddles have lowered her
sensibilities, she can't even remember those decisions, but somewhere deep
within her, those decisions still govern her life.
Nurses
and care-givers put on big smiles and a happy face, but they also know that
their patients are not going to get well.
For instance, the doctors had told her there were these
certain drugs she had to take every day, and that she couldn't have ANY salt
in her food, and that she had to drink one of the Ensure drinks with
every meal.
"You MUST Take Your Pills?" Is That What I Lived 83
Years To Hear?
While Mom was with Brother, he insisted she take her
pills, avoid all salt and drink that Ensure!
While Mom was with us, Bonnie told her that she was in
charge of her own destiny. If she wanted to throw the pills away, that was
her right.
We believe that any person has a right to die. I'm not
speaking about "assisted suicide," mind you, but I am talking about a person
making his or her own, personal, decision to die. While it may still be a
questionable practice, Dr. Jack Kevorkian's services were originally ruled
to be legal, despite attempts by many lower level courts and medical groups
to put him in jail. He IS in jail now, of course. Two different Federal
Appeals Courts had decided that a person, when in competent mental
condition, has a constitutional right to choose to die, and that he who
gives assistance in decision is not acting illegally. Those decisions have
fallen away, apparently.
The MUCH larger question has to do with forcing people to
live when they do not want to! That, I consider, is certainly unethical.
Would YOU force your invalided mother to swallow pills
just because a doctor said she should! Is that what 80 years of fruitful
life brings a person to??
Mom would tell us that she didn't want to take those
damn pills, that she wanted some salt on her food, and that she disliked
that chocolate Ensure drink.
We gave her the freedom to make these decisions for
herself.
Her deeper self, her earlier self, indeed even her body,
was running on the postulate of death being better than living in this
condition.
Faced with continued existence in this living vegetable
condition, she was looking for every possible way to achieve her goal of
death with dignity.
There was, then, yet another event!
Notice that people die in jumps -- not on a smooth
downward plane.
She
started to be very critical of her own son -- saying that he was not taking
care of her -- saying that she wanted to leave his home.
The nurse who was then coming in every day offered to
take Mom to her own home to live. We all agreed that would be best for
Mom. So, Mom ended her life living in a very modest home of her nurse. She
did have a room of her own, and loving care. Both Bonnie and her brother
went to that place often to visit with Mom. We all made the best of things.
We knew that we were sending her to her hospice!
Then, one day, it happened, as we all knew it would.
This nurse called Brother, and then Bonnie, to tell us that Mom had died in
her sleep. She had finally been able to leave that wretched condition.
The manner of her parting, and her Memorial Service were
very dramatic.
The nurse had a little 5-year old boy in the house -- a
boy who became a good friend to Mom. When Mom died, the boy's mother had to
explain this to him -- and talked about Mom going to heaven -- a traditional
Catholic view of death. The boy later told us that he saw Mom in that bed,
"alive" after the paramedics had removed the dead body.
He talked to her!
I conducted the memorial service. Bonnie and I knew,
with great certainty, that Mom was at the service, and was feeling great now
that she was out of that damn body. She was in good spirits -- and in good
communication with Bonnie (Bonnie is extremely good at this). Bonnie
assisted her Mom to find a new body for her next life, and Bonnie and I are
quite content that Mom is well on her way to a new and happy life.
You can't be very sad when you have this type of reality!
Brother would listen politely to us, not quite believe,
but he was satisfied that Mom's death was the right thing to happen when it
did.
And so the
Vedic Cycle of Birth, Growth, Decline and Death leads to the next cycle
of existence!
The Effect Of Electricity On The Body!
Dying is not an easy action for someone to
implement when he or she has been blasted out of mental clarity by
electricity!
The electric shock and invasive medical care had
virtually deprived her of the ability to carry out her own wishes, and she
had been relegated to a condition where others were using THEIR purposes,
rather than hers, to guide her destiny.
Grief is such a selfish emotion!
The loving relative usually has the purpose of keeping
the old parent around forever -- never wanting to face the fact that it is
his or her OWN grief and misery they are trying to avoid rather than the
desires of the parent!
Brother has now changed, due in no small part of seeing
how much happier Mom was while visiting us, and seeing that forcing her to
take drugs was the ultimate type of insult to a mother who had cared for her
kids for dozens of years!
We had made it clear to Mom that she was free to "go"
whenever she wished to "let go." Many of the other people she cared for told
her that "You have to live!"
You think I'm harsh and cruel toward a parent?
Nursing
homes, particularly hospices (a hospital-like facility devoted to allowing
patients to die with dignity), are faced with these situations constantly.
One of them, in Florida, published the following in its newsletter for
patients and relatives.
Keep in mind that the following advice was written for
those with loved ones already in a hospice -- a place where a person goes
for the purpose of dying.
Mom might have decided that she wanted to die, but she
was also not ready and afraid. No one around her would have agreed that she
belonged in a hospice.
So, many of the suggestions below will seem quite
reasonable for a hospice setting, but perhaps premature and not suitable for
your own mother in a nursing home.
I suggest that these concepts are often even more valid
outside the hospice setting -- for when that sick person has made a
sane and rational decision that living as an invalid is NOT better than
death.

Preparing For Approaching Death!
This
excerpt is taken from a publication of
Sun
Health Hospice, a private nursing facility.
When a person enters the final stage of the dying
process, two different dynamics are at work which are closely
interdependent.
The Physical Process Of Dying
On the physical plane the body begins the final process
of shutting down, which will end when all the physical systems cease to
function. Usually this is an orderly and undramatic progressive series in
physical changes which are not medical emergencies requiring invasive
interventions.
These physical changes are a normal, natural way in which
the body prepares itself to stop, and the most appropriate kinds of
responses are comfort enhancing measures.
The Spiritual Process Of Dying
The other dynamic of the dying process is at work on the
emotion-spiritual-mental plane, and is a different kind of process.
The "spirit" of the dying person begins the final process
of release from the body, it's immediate environment, and its attachments.
This release also tends to follow it's own priorities, which may include the
resolution of whatever is unfinished of a practical nature and reception of
permission to "let go" from family members.
These "events" are the normal natural way in which the
spirit prepares to move from this existence into the next dimension of life.
The most appropriate kinds of responses to the emotional-spiritual-mental
changes are those which support and encourage this release and transition.
When a person's body is ready and wanting to stop, but
the person is still unresolved or unreconciled over some important issue or
with some significant relationship, he/she may tend to linger, even though
uncomfortable or debilitated, in order to finish whatever needs finishing.
On the other hand, when a person is
emotionally-spiritually-mentally resolved and ready for this release, but
his/her body has not completed its final physical process, the person will
continue to live until the physical shutdown is completed.
Certainly some of Mom's grandchildren were very upset
with the idea of Mom leaving. They helped to keep her here. It appears, now,
that Bill, too, was anxious about this. When the person you most love wants
you to stay, you will probably keep that body alive no matter what pain has
to be endured.
The Final Moment!
The experience we call death occurs when the body
completes its natural process of shutting down, and when the "spirit"
completes its natural process of reconciling and finishing.
These two processes need to happen in a way appropriate
and unique to the values, beliefs, and life-style of the dying person.
Therefore,
as you seek to prepare yourself as this event approaches, the members of
your hospice care team want you to know what to expect and how to respond in
ways that will help your loved one accomplish this transition with support,
understanding and ease. This is the great gift of love you have to offer
your loved one as this moment approaches.
The physical and emotional-spiritual-mental signs and
symptoms of impending death which follow are offered to you to help you
understand that natural kinds of things which may happen and how you can
respond appropriately. Not all these signs and symptoms will occur with
every person, nor will they occur in this particular sequence.
Death Is A Unique Experience
Each person is unique and needs to do things in his/her
own way. This is not the time to try to change your loved one, but the time
to give full acceptance, support and comfort.
The following signs and symptoms described are indicative
of how the body prepares itself for the final stage of life.
Steps Toward Physical Death
1. COOLNESS: The person's hands, arms, feet and then legs
may become increasingly cool to the touch, and at the same time the color of
the skin may change.
The underside of the body may become darker and the skin
may become mottled. This is a normal indication that the circulation of
blood is decreasing to the body's extremities and being reserved for the
most vital organs. Keep the person warm with a sheet or light blanket, but
do not use an electric blanket.
2. SLEEPING: the person may spend an increasing amount of
time sleeping, and appear to be uncommunicative or unresponsive and at times
be difficult to arouse.
This normal change is due in part to changes in the
metabolism of the body. Sit with your loved one, hold his/her hand, do not
shake or speak loudly, but speak softly and naturally. Plan to spend time
with him/her during those times when he/she seems most alert/awake.
Do not talk about the person in the person's presence,
speak to him or her directly as you normally would, even though there may be
no response. Never assume the person cannot hear as hearing is the last of
the senses to be lost.
3. DISORIENTATION: The person may seem to be confused
about the time, place and identity of people surrounding him/her, including
close and familiar people. This is also due in part to the metabolism
changes.
Identify yourself by name before you speak rather than to
ask the person to guess who you are. Speak softly, clearly and truthfully
when you need to communicate something important for the patient's comfort,
such as "it is time to take your medication," and explain the reason for the
communication, such as "so you won't begin to hurt."
4. INCONTINENCE: the person may lose control of urine
and/or bowl matter as the muscles in that area begin to relax. Discuss with
your hospice nurse what can be done to protect the bed and keep your loved
one clean and comfortable.
5. CONGESTION: the person may have gurgling sounds coming
from his/her chest as though marbles were rolling around inside. These
sounds may become very loud. This normal change is due to the decrease of
fluid intake and an inability to cough up normal secretions.
Suctioning usually only increases the secretions and
causes sharp discomfort. Gently turn the person's head to the side and allow
gravity to drain the secretions. You may also gently wipe the mouth with a
moist cloth. The sound of the congestion does not indicate the onset of
severe or new pain.
6. RESTLESSNESS: The person may make restless and
repetitive motions such as pulling at bed linen or clothing. This often
happens and is due in part to the decrease in oxygen circulation to the
brain and to metabolism changes.
Do not interfere with or try to restrain such motions. To
have a calming effect, speak in a quiet, natural way, lightly massage the
forehead, read to the person, or play some soothing music.
7. FLUID AND FOOD DECREASE: The person may have a
decrease in appetite and thirst, wanting little or no food or fluid. The
body will naturally begin to conserve energy which is expended on these
tasks. Do not try to force food or drink into the person or try to use guilt
to manipulate them into eating or drinking something. To do this only makes
the person much more uncomfortable.
Small chips of ice, frozen Gatorade or juice may
be refreshing in the mouth. If the person is able to swallow, fluids may be
given in small amounts (ask the hospice nurse for guidance). Sponge moisture
may help keep the mouth and lips moist and comfortable. A cool, moist
washcloth on the forehead may also increase physical comfort. Vaseline
applied to lips, teeth or gums may prevent sticking, cracking or irritation.
8. URINE DECREASE: The person's urine output normally
decreases and may become "tea" colored, referred to as concentrated urine.
This is due to the decreased fluid intake as well as decrease in circulation
through the kidneys. Consult with your hospice nurse to determine whether
there may be a need to insert or irrigate a catheter.
9. BREATHING PATTERN CHANGE: The person's regular
breathing pattern may change with the onset of a different breathing pace. A
particular pattern consists of breathing irregularly, i.e., shallow breaths
with periods of no breathing of 5 to 30 seconds and up to a full minute.
This is called "Cheyne-Stokes" breathing. The
person may also experience periods of rapid shallow pant-like breathing.
These patterns are very common and indicate decrease in circulation in the
internal organs. Elevating the head, and/or turning the person on his/her
side may bring comfort. Hold his/her hand. Speak gently.
NORMAL EMOTIONAL-SPIRITUAL-MENTAL SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS WITH
APPROPRIATE RESPONSES
1. WITHDRAWAL: The person may seem unresponsive,
withdrawn, or in a comatose-like state. This indicates preparation for
release, a detaching from surroundings and relationships, and a beginning of
"letting go."
Since hearing remains all the way to the end, speak to
your loved one in your normal tone of voice, identifying yourself by name
when you speak. Hold his/her hand, and say whatever you need to say that
will help the person "let go."
2. VISION-LIKE EXPERIENCES: The person may speak or claim
to have spoken to persons who have already died, or to see or have seen
places not presently accessible or visible to you.
This does not indicate an hallucination or a drug
reaction. The person is beginning to detach from this life and is being
prepared for the transition so it will not be frightening. Do not
contradict, explain away, belittle or argue about what the person claims to
have seen or heard. Just because you cannot see or hear it does not mean
it's not real to your loved one. Affirm his or her experiences. They are
normal and common. If they frighten your loved one, explain to him or her
that they are normal.
3. RESTLESSNESS: The person may perform repetitive and
restless tasks. This may in part indicate that something is still unresolved
or unfinished that is disturbing him/her, and preventing him/her from
letting go.
Your hospice team members will assist you in identifying
what may be happening and help you find ways to help the person find release
from the tension or fear. Other things which may be helpful in calming the
person are to recall a favorite place the person enjoyed, a favorite
experience, read something comforting, play music, and give assurance that
is OK to let go.
4. FLUID AND FOOD DECREASE: When the person may want
little or no fluid or food, this may indicate that the person is ready for
the final shut down.
Do not try to force food or fluid. You may help your
loved one by giving them permission to let go whenever he/she is ready. At
the same time affirm the person's ongoing value to you and the good you will
carry forward into your life that you received from him/her.
5. DECREASED SOCIALIZATION: The person may only want to
be with a very few or even just one person. This is a sign of preparation
for release and an affirming of who the support is most needed from in order
to make the appropriate transition.
If you are not part of this "inner circle" at the end it
does not mean you are not loved or are unimportant. It means you have
already fulfilled your task with him/her and it is the time for you to say
"good-bye." If you are part of the final "inner circle" or support, the
person needs your affirmation, support, and permission.
6. UNUSUAL COMMUNICATION: The person may make a seemingly
"out of character" or unusual statement, gesture or request. This may
indicate that he/she is ready to say "good-bye" and is "testing" to see if
you are ready to let him/her go. Accept the moment as a beautiful gift when
it is offered. Kiss, hug, hold, cry, and say whatever you must need to say.
7. GIVING PERMISSION: Giving permission to your loved one
to let go without making him/her feel guilty for leaving or trying to keep
him/her with you to meet your own needs can be difficult.
A dying person will normally try to hold on, even though
it brings prolonged discomfort, in order to be sure that those who are going
to be left behind will be all right. Therefore, you ability to release the
dying person from this concern and give him/her assurance that you will be
all right and that it is all right to let go whenever he/she is ready, is
one of the greatest gifts you have to give your loved one at this time.
8. SAYING GOOD-BYE: When the person is ready to die and
you are able to let go, then is the time to say "good-bye." Saying
"good-bye" is your final gift of love to the loved one, for it achieves
closure and makes the final release possible. It may be helpful to lay in
bed with the person and hold him/her, or to take the hand and then say
everything you need to say.
It may be as simple as saying, "I love you." it may
include recounting favorite memories, places and activities you shared. It
may include saying, "I'm sorry for whatever I contributed to any tensions or
difficulties in our relationship." It may also include saying, "Thank you
for . . . "
Tears are a normal and natural part of saying,
"good-bye." Tears do not need to be hidden from your loved one or apologized
for. Tears express your love and help you to let go.
How Will You Known When Death Has Occurred?
Although you may be prepared for the death process, you
may not be prepared for the actual death moment. It may be helpful for you
and your family to think about and discuss what you would do if you were the
one present at the death moment. The death of a hospice patient is not an
emergency.
Nothing must be done immediately. The signs of death
include such things as: no breathing, no heartbeat, release of bowel and
bladder, no response, eyelids slightly open, pupils enlarged, eyes fixed on
a certain spot, jaw relaxed and mouth slightly open.
A hospice nurse will come to assist you if needed or
desired. If not, phone support is available.
The body does not have to be moved until you are ready.
If the family wants to assist in preparing the body by bathing or dressing,
that may be done.
Call the funeral home when you are ready to have the body
moved and identify the person as a hospice patient, also tell the funeral
home that this is an expected death and that the patient's physician for
hospice care will sign the death certificate, do not call 911, nor should
the police be called. The hospice nurse will notify the physician.
What's The Current Scene?
Mom could have stayed around for years, or she could
have, yet, decided to end this existence in a day. In either of these
events, she was, I feel, the ONLY one who had any right to make that
decision, and she DID have the right to support of her loved ones in
whatever decision she made.
Perhaps you'll show your deep love for a parent or
husband or wife, or child, by realizing that "letting go" is the most
critical and most difficult step for both the dying person and the one
remaining behind.
No account of this process would be complete without an
important reminder that SOME people decide to live, and are denied that
opportunity by the ignorance and arrogance of a medical profession that
gives them drugs and surgery when prayer, love and simple foods and vitamins
may do far, far more.
But, it is also true that the sick person may well
believe that it is the drugs which he or she needs. I would not ever force
someone to NOT take those drugs, no matter how much I might disagree with
that approach.
The person who wants to die surely has the right to die,
but the person who wants to live, surely has a right to the truth when it
comes to treatments that can help a willing spirit overcome the frailties of
the body! That person also has the right to make what I consider a dumb
decision.
May You Observe And Judge Wisely -- Between Whether Your
Loved One WANTS To Die, Or WANTS To Live!
Now, What Happens Next?
This part of this article you may regard as speculative,
but I happen to have a calm certainty about certain events during and after
the transition from the moment of death.
First, the great majority of people on earth today have a
firm belief in God and have some clear or cloudy understanding of a
continued existence for the soul or spirit after death.
That continued existence takes many
forms, but the point here is that the belief in SOME form of continued
existence, even in today's materialistic world, is almost universal.
There ARE those who claim that man lives but once, and
that we are creatures made of mud and chemicals -- with death bringing a
permanent end. These are the people that say that man is an animal without a
soul.
I reject that from belief and from personal experience.
Let me wind up this article with an abbreviated version
of the story of the death of my own mother, Milda.
Milda was 78 when she died. Up to that time, she, like my
mother-in-law, refused to listen to her own son about vitamins; she smoked
up until the day she died!
She, too, had insisted that she would never put up with
dying slowly, or becoming an invalid. She lived alone, in a small cottage by
Lake Erie in Cleveland, Ohio, when I was living in California. She came to
visit us a couple times every year..
I got the call, living in California, that my mother was
in surgery, and that it looked very grave.
Again
sparing the medical and personal details, I immediately flew to her side.
She was conscious when I arrived. She had those tubes stuck down her throat,
so couldn't talk, but she wrote lots of notes to me -- telling me where she
had hidden various stock certificates and currency around the house. She had
some important documents sewn into certain cushions, and some under the ice
cube tray in the ‘fridg.'
I was her only child, and we were very close. Of my six
children, she was particularly close to my middle son, her grandson,
Garth.
Do You Want To Get Better?
I had a very strong sense of her wishes about death when
I arrived, and during the hours I spent with her I asked, in several ways,
and several times, if she wanted to get better. Her answer was always "no!"
She knew that my son Garth was coming to see her within a
day, and it was obvious afterwards that she stayed fully conscious and very
alert until he got there. It was clear that she wanted to see him before she
died.
After he had visited with her for a few hours, that night
she slipped into a coma. The next day, as my son and I both sat by her side,
it looked like there would be no change in her condition. The nurse told us
that she might linger in that condition for weeks, or might die any minute.
Let's Get A Cup Of Coffee!
I
asked my son, Garth, to go with me for a cup of coffee. As we sat in the
hospital cafeteria, not more than 15 minutes away from Milda, I explained to
Garth that Milda was very upset because Garth didn't want her to die. I told
him that she wanted to die, and that his hanging onto her made it very
difficult for her to leave.
It was not immediate, or even easy, but Garth came around
during those 15 minutes. He understood that the greater love was allowing a
person to have freedom and permission to pursue her own goals!
When we went back upstairs to see Milda again, she had
passed away during that short time.
I have no doubt of her ability to be aware of Garth's
grief, and his desire that she stay among us living.
I have no doubt of her comfort at knowing, finally, that
he had decided that it was OK for her to leave.
Now, without trying to be mystical, but also without
trying to offer too much detail, I then also had no doubt about certain
further communications I received from my mother, after the death of her
body.
She had wanted her body to be cremated, and it was very
clear to me that she stayed around me and the body until the cremation was
finished.
It was also very clear to me that she was at the memorial
service. The pastor of her church actually allowed me to conduct the entire
service. He introduced me, but I took over and ran the entire memorial
service -- an ode to the joy of my mother's life.
She was there!
I have no doubt about that. Bonnie and I sat by the lake,
the lake beloved by Milda, Lake Erie, and did our own personal and private
memorial service while we cast my mother's ashes on the waters. That was
when Milda finally left our space -- with great joy for all three of us.
She had had a very comfortable and happy
leaving from that existence. She was at rest with the world.
Don't, for any minute, believe that your dying loved one
cannot sense you or hear you. And, don't ever think, for one minute, that
the death of the body means an end of communications.
You may talk in a normal voice, to your loved one, now
departed. You ought not to be angry or in grief at the moment of death, or
after, because, believe me, the one departing has an immediate sense of
release from an old and sick body, an immediate sense of freedom, an
immediate sense of something far better ahead.
The Biggest Mistake You Can Make At The Time Of Death Of
A Loved One!
You wouldn't want all those wonderful feelings to be
interrupted by your own thoughts or words -- telling your loved one that the
death was a terrible mistake, and that he or she should not have died!
Death must be approached with care -- to plan for the
completion of all the important cycles that a person has on his or her mind.
When the body is ready to shut down, the spirit is often the only thing
which keeps it alive.
When the spirit is ready to go, it is all too often some
modern medical miracle that forces that spirit to stay connected to a living
vegetable body!
One of the most important cycles for any person is the
act of saying "good-bye" to all who were important to him or her.
One of the most important things you can do for such a
person is to give them your permission to leave.
Drugs and heroic medical efforts, unfortunately, can keep
a body alive far longer than the spirit may wish. It is not an easy thing,
necessarily, to die with dignity. While the great bulk of humanity will
understand and agree with the thoughts in this article, probably the great
majority of medical doctors would deny their truth.
Both the body and the spirit have to arrive at that final
moment of death in a state of peace with the world.
You have an important duty to help your loved ones pass
from this existence into the next in a way that gives them the greatest
comfort and peace at a moment that is very important to them and to you.
End Note About Bill
I wanted you to read this article without yet knowing one
other dramatic detail about Bill. This will probably help you understand
him better.
You see that when he took up with Mom, as a companion, he
still had his wife alive, in a nursing hospital, suffering from Alzheimer's
and completely unable to communicate with anyone. Bill (and Mom, too) would
go to visit her. She never recognized her own husband, and she had been in
that condition for some years. Bill, of course, was devastated by this, and
it was a huge moral dilemma for him to consider living with Mom. Mom had
been a good friend to Bill's wife, over many years. They both tussled with
this question, and took advice from us kids. We urged them to live together,
and to seek the happiness they could have together. They obviously could
not marry, but they could live together.
Well, you may have your own moral considerations about
this, but consider this next factor.
Bill had a wife of more than 50 years, still alive, but
practically a vegetable. Now he was faced with another woman, dear to him,
who might soon become, also, a vegetable. Bill, although an old man, was
still very vigorous and had a good life yet to live.
Was he to wind up, now, spending his time visiting two
vegetables -- women he loved, but who couldn't communicate with him.
He was under terrible stress.
We fault him, some, for abandoning our Mom, but we surely
do understand his decision.

May I Hear From You?
If you have some experience with what I've written about,
I would deeply appreciate your sharing your experience with me.
|