Tuesday, March 31, 2009

"The Last Great Act of Living," or How My Dad Taught Me How to Live by Showing Me How to Die

The always wonderful Canadian bioethicist Margarette Somerville has a terrific and thoughtful article about dying, disability, and the great meaning that can be found in these times of difficulty. It's a long piece and I can't do justice to it--for that you will have to read it for yourselves. But we can present the gist as an appetizer.

She first identifies one of the driving forces behind the euthanasia movement. From her column:

Euthanasia allows people to feel that although they can't avoid death, they can control its manner, time and place. It's a terror reduction or terror control mechanism that operates at both the individual and societal level. So if we believe legalizing euthanasia would be a very bad idea, we need to develop and communicate other ways to deal with our fear of death.
An answer to terror is unleashing "the human spirit:"
It's a term I use in a religiously neutral sense, in that it can be accepted by people who are not religious and those who are, and, if religious, no matter what their religion. By it I mean the intangible, immeasurable, numinous reality that all of us need access to in order to find meaning in life and to make life worth living; that deeply intuitive sense of relatedness or connectedness to all life, especially other people, to the world, and to the universe in which we live; the metaphysical--but not necessarily supernatural--reality which we need to experience to live fully human lives...
The key is finding hope:
Hope is the oxygen of the human spirit; without it our spirit dies, with it we can overcome even seemingly insurmountable obstacles...Even terminally ill people can have hope--what we can call "mini-hopes"--for instance, to stay alive long enough to see a grandchild born, to attend a daughter's wedding, to see an old friend the next day or to see the sun rise and hear the birds' dawn chorus.
But ensuring hope requires action from us:
We must accept old or dying people's gifts, especially those gifts that are of the essence of themselves, recognizing that they and the person who gives them are unique and precious, as are their lives or last days on earth. In confirming the worth of these gifts we confirm the worth of the giver, and the old or dying person needs that confirmation.
Somerville concludes:
The challenge is to maintain death as the last great act of human life, a final human act through which we can still find meaning and, I suggest most importantly, pass meaning on to others. In other words, in our dying, we need to be given the opportunity to leave a legacy of meaning. .
I saw Somerville's vision vividly brought to life when my father fell badly ill, declined, and then died from colon cancer. I watched an already wonderful man-- grow. Through the crucible of failing health, Dad strived boldly to develop a secure sense of himself that had escaped him during his difficult youth, the horrors of war, and even the success of having become a mechanical engineer despite never having gone to high school.

As he struggled with cancer, he sat day after day overlooking his beloved cactus garden contemplating the meaning of it all. He had no formal religion, and kept his thoughts in this regard to himself. Once, when I asked him what he believed, he would only say, "I have my beliefs." And he never lost touch with life. For example, this was the time when I was transitioning out of active law practice--foregoing a very good living for a time of great financial insecurity--and Dad was not amused. I was called to account and we had a profound conversation over a lingering lunch at a Pasadena restaurant about life and its purpose.

Dad had his bad moments, of course. And I am sure there were tears and fears he expressed in private to my mother. But mostly what I saw was fortitude. It didn't come easily: He worked to achieve it, aided immensely by the gratitude he felt at being loved by family and friends. I saw him rally and experience a year of health his doctors said he wouldn't have. And, when that time passed, I saw him decide to stop fighting and let nature take its course. Dad died in a Veteran's hospital hospice on Lincoln's birthday in 1984, a better man than he had ever been on the day that was his last.

The idea of assisted suicide and euthanasia wasn't even considered by our family. At that time, it wasn't even an issue in the public's consciousness. But, there is no way Dad would have gone that route. He found his dignity, his transcendence, by finding hope and purpose in his dying, just as Somerville describes.

I only hope that when my time comes, I have it within me to emulate my father. This much I know: The way Dad died was the last of his many great gifts to me. I still love him so much and miss him every day.

(The photo is of my parents in 1945 upon Dad's return from World War II)

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5 Comments:

At March 31, 2009 , Blogger Heather Seierstad said...

I didn't agree with everything he said, but I enjoyed the late M. Scott Peck's book "Denial of the Soul" on this very subject. It was a poignant argument against euthanasia and assisted suicide.

 
At April 01, 2009 , Blogger Ken Crawford said...

When I used to be an athiest, I had a profound realization of the end that was death. It was REALLY the END. The idea of suicide was just ridiculous to me. To me it always seemed that even if I ever got to a point where life didn't feel worth living the key was to find a way to make it worth living. Giving up and reaching that final END was just not an option, I couldn't see how giving up could be, it was only something that I would be forced into.

When one couples that obvious conclusion for a person that doesn't believe in an afterlife and the conclusions of the value of our human spirit for those who do believe in an afterlife, it is completely clear to me that suicide is an act of dispair, inherently an issue of mental illness (perhaps temporary), and in no way a choice that a reasonable thinking person could make.

 
At April 01, 2009 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

This from a reader, posted with her permission:

"Both my Mother and my Father suffered for quite a few years before their deaths. Like your father, neither would have ever thought of ending their own lives. They taught me more about living in those years through their example, each of them in the most profound way. I learned more than all that I had learned from them prior to those years even though their deaths were separated by over 20 years. It is a legacy I treasure with all my heart, and I hope that I will live and die following their examples."

 
At April 01, 2009 , Blogger T E Fine said...

Ken-

I applaud you, sir. I have said something similar many times, but I don't have either your eloquence or your personal experience with atheism to make my argument sound as reasonable and, truthfully, as beautiful as yours.

I heard an interesting argument against abortion and euthanasia from a Wiccan group that believes in reincarnation. The website stated that people are incarnated and reincarnated to fulfill some kind of learning, and interfering with the natural lifespan is wrong because it affects that person's karma. So it's not just moral atehists and traditional Christians who oppose euthanasia and abortion, but people of all religions and beliefs express a desire for life and making every moment a moment of growth, even the last ones.

 
At April 01, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

T.E. I am not one to go on about karma and reincarnation, theoretically correct though they seem to be and I don't like Wiccanism. But that argument is valid. I once asked a very talented psychic why my brother (whose birth chart shows a very short lifespan) had lived only three days, and she said that he had in his last lifetime committed suicide three days before the time he had been supposed to live, and had had to come back to live those three days. It does make sense. My mother's life was ended against her will at a time that reflected the evil that caused it to end, and every time I ask a medium how she's doing in the next dimension I'm told she's making visitations to those who murdered her. Well, they asked for it. No question there is another dimension and that they visit; not long after the light bulb in the front porch light fixture, and then in the lamp on the front hall table, went out before they should have (spirits do that when they visit, it's said), one day the house all of a sudden felt happy and joyful and the atmosphere in it was as it had been when my parents would have a party; a couple of weeks later I told a medium about the light bulbs and she asked what year my parents had had a party on such and such day (the date of the day I just described, which I hadn't mentioned to her), and said that she'd rounded up those who'd been there who are now on the other side and said remember that party? Let's go back to the house! And they did. The lawyer who created the "living will" she didn't want followed, and another person who set up the ultimate course of events, both suddenly and inexplicitly lost their balance on the front steps of the house; no question my dad's spirit did that; the priest who wouldn't help the day before her murder and said "I'm not so sure it's the wrong thing" (he was Catholic before he converted to our religion, which is more pro-life than current Vatican doctrine) tripped on the altar during her funeral; the other priest, who understands things better, agreed that her spirit had made sure that happened. Chaplains at the hospital termed what was going on re her there as evil and agreed with me that it was as if bad spirits had gotten into the hospital. Should medicine take a spiritual approach? Absolutely.

 

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