After Belgium, who's next?
Elie Wiesel wrote that to live as a man...means to say yes to life -- to fight -- even against the Almighty, for every spark, for every breath of life. This is from a man who survived the death camps of Nazi Germany. He wrote that living includes suffering. Adam and Eve suffered when escorted beyond the gates of the Garden. Their challenge, he said lay in defeating oblivion, not pain.
Brendan Marrocco, 26, a veteran of the Iraqi war, lost both arms and legs in a roadside bombing four years ago. He's the first soldier from the Iraqi war to have survived such traumatic injury.
He learned to live with prosthetic arms and legs. He became the recipient of two donor arms, just before Christmas. He has great plans, including driving his car, swimming and someday competing in a marathon using a handcycle. He's thrilled to get arms. He said you can live well without legs, but having arms opens the world to great possibilities. I watched him on TV. He has a great sense of humour.
Compare Brandon's choices to the twins in Belgium. They asked to be euthanized because they couldn't face the future possibility of not being able to see each other as blindness set in. They had no concern for the sibling and parents they would be leaving behind who would no longer be able to see them. And most recently, Ruth Goodman, took her life while still in great health but "feared becoming dependent."
I recently read The Republic of Suffering by Drew Gilpin Faust. It's a heart-breaking record of the effect multi-thousands of deaths had on the understanding of death and dying during the American Civil War. I had already developed a strong opinion about "death with dignity." This book moved me further.
I've come to believe we've lost the art of dying well: ars bene moriendi, because we've lost the meaning of a good death. Akheel A Syed, specialist registrar at the British Medical Journal wrote in 2003:
A good death is like the final chapter of a good book: it wraps up the story of 'life' with panache; is physically, emotionally, and spiritually satisfying to the author (the deceased) and the readers (kith and kin); and leaves no loose ends to be explained in a sequel.
Our understanding and discussion of death with dignity, today, would be anathema to the people of the Third World. It would be blasphemous to people whose idea of a death with dignity is one that ends naturally without the intervention of machete or machine gun, or death to ones' children from preventable diseases. We refer to these countries as "developing" while we think of ourselves as the developed world. Well, we have developed.
We are a society bloated with abundance and self-worth. We're self-centred and self-indulgent. It's all about me; my needs, my wants, my desires; a mean-spiritedness that excludes the feelings and emotions of others. I remember reading not too long ago a definition of today's society. It is the "i" generation-iPad, iPod, iPhone, iWant.
We live in a country that provides health care, hospice care and palliative care, the support of doctors, nurses, social workers and chaplains for those facing great health fears: life-threatening surgery, cancers, bacterial infections.
We cannot legally take our lives in the middle of a health crisis, no matter the pain or the fear. We will be forced to endure. But if we are told that we have six months to live, well, that's different. Even if not in pain, death can come not at any time, but on our time. At our convenience. As if death were ever meant to be convenient. Like banking hours.
We want to die on our own terms because of a fear of indignity to the human body. Fear of coma, of a diaper. We want to die while competent, alert, awake, aware, not detached, so that we can say what we want to say when we want to say it. On our own time. Scripted, like a movie. Peter Stockland wrote on the Cardus blog, if we had to end grandma's pain with a pillow over her face, holding her down while she struggled would we? But a pill? Well, that's okay. It's so much more convenient, less messy. It's faster. And one thing we want in this day and age is speed.
I have lost track of the number of times I have heard, "They shoot horses, don't they?" Yes, because they have become a burden to their owners. We don't put down pets only out of love for them; we do it because caring for them becomes too burdensome.
We don't want to put our puppies in diapers or carry them outside four or five times a day -- rain or shine. We "let them go" for selfish reasons, not just compassion. So do we want to treat people like our animals? "Let them go" because they are a burden?
Not too long ago, before anesthetic, pain killers, antibiotics, people fought to stay alive, knowing what was facing them, because for them life was worth the fight. Pain and suffering were worthy opponents. Life, ones own and that of loved ones, had value.
What has happened to us that we deem it normal to enter into discussions about assisted-suicide and euthanasia in our world of luxury? Have we become so entitled, soft, so weak-willed, so whiny and petulant that we cannot even bear the thought of future possible pain that we choose a lethal injection in expectation? Have we come to a place in time that leaving the ones who love us, need us, are not as important as our "dignity"? Have we become that self-serving?
What exactly are we teaching our children? I watched a programme where a mother with cancer decided to end her life before she suffered too much pain. She was leaving her eight-year-old son and husband behind. She had a good-bye party with friends and family. She danced and sang before she drank of the elixir. It was a happy time. Really? She's considered brave for taking her own life while well enough to dance and sing. I wonder how her son really felt. His mother was leaving him. He was eight years old. How will that affect his sense of abandonment and self-worth?
And then there was the story of Gloria Taylor. She was discussing her decision to kill herself with her son and granddaughter. I watched her son cry at the thought of his mother dying, leaving him and his daughter. I listened to her explain her decision to take her own life to her granddaughter. My first thought was: "Who in their right mind takes their own life?" How do we square the idea that we are aghast at suicide, a sign of mental illness,but we encourage assisted-suicide and euthanasia?
Organizations that assist with assisted-suicide have provided anti-anxiety medication prior to the killing dose. It seems people get anxious just before they kill themselves. That should send bells ringing. There should be no sense of anxiety if the person truly wants to end her life. And then there is the bag over the head-filled with helium.
Why do we elevate these people onto a pedestal? Why do we applaud their fear of future pain over unselfish love of family? Are they not, like so many others who choose early death, teaching their families to run from fear or even more importantly, to fear pain and suffering that come with living?
John Paul II recognized the insidious threat inherent in man's attempt to take the role of God into his own hands. From the "right to die," it would be only a matter of time until the old and infirm would have "a duty to die."
Death with dignity is an oxymoron. Dignity is in life. To die with dignity is to face death, boldly, calmly, graciously. A good death is one that honours the life before. Assisted suicide is a vulgar act of cowardice. It diminishes our species. It demeans and disrespects all those who fight each day for survival. It is deserving of the white feather.
There may be an argument why this logic does not apply human beings. You have produced no such argument.
If religions stopped spreading their lies of an afterlife and people understood that this was it, this life is all you got, that would go a long way to helping dignify life.
Cowardice is believing in an immortal soul that is going to live on after you die in paradise with winged creatures and an old man with a beard and younger man with holes in his hands, regardless of whether that death is assisted or otherwise.
Religion poisons everything.
You said that: “Death with dignity is an oxymoron. Dignity is in life". I think that to suffer indignity one has to be alive; therefore both indignity and dignity are in life. It is the indignity of a slow wasting death brought-on by disease that some would choose to avoid. I support that right to choose.
You also said that "To die with dignity is to face death, boldly, calmly, graciously"; well - is death with dignity an oxymoron or is it facing one's death with bold, calm grace? Actually that was just a pot-shot at your meandering, mean spirited blather.
As if all that counts is how many "fans" someone has here on the interweb.
And no big surprise that those who clamour so coldly and vehemently for death also show the least respect for their fellow human beings who choose to include a sacred element in their lives.
Mine is spending money on those least able to care for themselves. Mine is supporting death-not causing it. It is shameful that in North America, land of plenty, we do not prioritize nor provide loving, compassionate care that does not champion euthanasia/assisted-suicide.DWB
Your article seethes with pious self-righteousness. The exact thing that turns people off your belief system.
It's obvious your religion is based on fear and the people that choose to die with dignity are far more brave than you. Your imaginary friend's wrath has no power over them...and for that I am truly thankful.
This is pretty disgusting. People like that should not have pets if they put them down just because they are a "burden". a life is a life. they feel, they have emotions they don't deserve to be treated as a being not worth of living.
And when it comes to assisted suicide, it is the decision of the dying one, not that of anyone around it. If a person feels that he wants to end his life instead of dealing with pain, it should be their right. And nobody should have the right to either kill them against their will or force them to live.
Right.
But once we accept that life is a cheap commodity to be discarded when times get tough I can assure you that is precisely what will happen to the sick, the vulnerable and the disabled. I don't hear the "Right to Death" folks speaking the language of humanity and love. What I hear death is good, death is right, death is desirable, death is merciful, death is not being a burden to your family.
You only quoted a part of what i said, and this gives my sentence a different meaning. I said nobody should have a right to kill them against their will. This is different. I think you make a valid argument that some people may be pressured in choosing to end their life. But this could be controlled.
First of all, assisted suicide should not be offered to everyone, but to the ones whose life is about to end anyways, where it is pretty sure that there is no help for them and what they have to go through from now is to suffer until death, which has nothing to do with actually "living life"
I also would never want let's say my parents to end their life because it takes me too much to take care of them. They are the ones who loved me and took care of me all my life and because of this I will do anything for them as long as their live. They will never be a "burden". Before assisted suicide it should always be possible to investigate what this family is like and if their relatives could indeed want them to die.
And when it comes to death, i don't define it as either horrible or good. It all depends on the situation. I could see that someone who can't leave the bed, is on drugs, non functional, still feeling pains and unable to actually live may find it desirable. It is up to them,not me to decide how they should view death. If they find it desirable, they should get it.
Same goes for dying with dignity. It means different things for everyone. Some may say it is to die while they can still wipe their own butt, others feel it is to live it through suffering until the end. It is not up to me or the columnist or the politicians to define what dignity means. It is only up to the person in question.
But then again there is a scary amount of people who abandon their pets for reasons like "i had to move", "i had a baby", even though it would be possible to avoid with some effort which they were not willing to put into it. Unfortunately some people don't respect the living beings and see them as accessories....
(Lots. Dollars to doughnuts she LIKES passing judgement on those who are ALREADY suffering.)
I wonder if diane has the gall to call them vile, cowardly, entitled, soft, weak-willed, whiny and petulant to their faces???
(Probably, only the weakest, most petrified patients and those without any sort of protection or support got to hear these horrible names and accusations of demeaning our ENTIRE SPECIES.)
That lack of professional care speaks to our lack of compassion and that is the slippery slope.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/where-this-family-of-volunteers-help-death-is-a-constant-visitor/article8767301/ DWB
" I worry that assisted suicide might become murder by proxy in many cases. To make life easier (and perhaps cheaper) by helping mum along. Thereby clearing the last obstacle to accessing mum's money, life insurance, etc. Should it become legal, it could also become the norm."
Of course it will become the norm.
To be a fly on the wall when your day comes, to hear the apologies of "what have I done", to hear your own begging for mercy, for the end.
I wonder how much exposure to the process you've had with descriptions like "boldly, calmly, graciously"?
If you had spent some time with my sister at the end, when she was a third of her natural body weight, when the drugs had kept her alive so much longer than any natural method could have, much longer than she wanted, to hear the screams of a love one, to feel the helplessness, to suffer beyond comprehension, perhaps then you would have more empathy for the dying.
To say assisted suicide is a "vulgar act of cowardice" is shocking and an insult to me and anyone else that has had to care for a passing loved one that did not wish for prolonged suffering from a backwards political/medical community that values the $2k a day it take for protracted palliative care over the suffering of human beings.
My sister wanted it but could not afford to go to a country where it was legal, and she paid a price beyond description.
This article is vulgar and cowardly and yet another example of why we need to get religion out of our politics, health care, and education.
-Dr. House
I respect your beliefs and would not belittle your health/mental condition.
I would ask you to trust that those who have different system of beliefs and different health conditions could be as good and moral people as you are (not cowards). And I would ask you to be compassionate enough to meet them where they are and support them where they are -- whether taking their life or deciding to fight.
I would ask you to be compassionate enough to allow other people to make their own choices and not judge them.
That's, actually, what they teach nurses and volunteers who work in End-Of-Life settings -- to meet patients where they are without judgement.
I am familiar with palliative training firsthand. I will assure you, it's one of cornerstone principals of palliative care: to meet a patient where they are without judgment. There are obviously some people in palliative system who push their (religious usually) agenda. My personal opinion: they are there for wrong reasons. They will "help" you no matter what--even if you ask them not to... I only hope that when I am dying, I won't have such people around me.
Choosing to end one's life does not speak well of our country, our health care system. Whether the desire to commit suicide comes from bullying that triggers a mental illness or the fear of the end of life-which for many is normal, there is no excuse for taking one's life. It speaks to our failure in compassion and care for the weakest amongst us. Care for the stranger, the weak, the oppressed, the widow and orphan, burying the dead is the most important directive that comes to us from ethical monotheism. We are failing that directive. DWB
I love life, but if I am in agonizing pain without a chance of relief, I don't want to live it. If you ever experienced it, you would know--it's not living. It is hell. Again, I am not talking about challenges of losing one's limbs or mobility. I am talking about agonizing physical pain. 24x7 without relief. How would you care for a person who cannot even hear you because of pain? Care for the stranger should be specific to be meaningful. It should be what this suffering person needs--not what you think they need. If a person needs their pain to stop and you cannot give it to them, your advice for them to take the pain in stride does not help.
And, nobody encourages anyone to kill other people (unless we send them to war...)! I work and do research in End-Of-Life field but never heard about such thing.