Dealing
with death, learning about life Thoughts on a proper goodbye
By Virginia Morris ’81
Virginia Morris ’81 is the author of Talking about Death
and How to Care for Aging Parents. She lives in Sag Harbor,
N.Y., with her husband and two children.
When I was five months pregnant, my siblings and I returned to our childhood
home to care for our father. Prostate cancer had moved into his bones,
and he was now fading away, disappearing before our eyes.
He lay in his king-size bed, and we tended to him like new parents.
We adjusted his pain medications, arranged and rearranged his pillows,
and gave him sips of cool limey water. We smoothed back wisps of white
hair, cupped his big hands against our cheeks, and buried our faces in
the familiar warmth of his neck.
During those final weeks together, my family cried a lot, but we also
laughed and reminisced. With our words, we took my father back to a sailboat
rocking over the waves along the coast of Maine, to the pine paths of
our lake house, and to the edge of our own pool where his five squealing
children would beg him to jump. He always did it the same way: straight
down, feet first, holding his nose and puffing out his cheeks, then disappearing
until one foot slowly rose from the depths, which brought on a chorus
of giggles. We sat on his bed and told him about the people who had called,
we laughed at reruns of old TV shows, and we sang silly songs he had taught
us on long car rides. (And, I suppose I must confess this here, in the
days before he died, my father, Class of ’36, woke from the depths
of morphine and cancer to sing “Old Nassau” one last time.)
When our time together was up, we told him he was safe, that we’d
be fine, that he’d lived his life well, that we’d take care
of our mother, and that we would never, ever, forget him. We told him
that he could go. And, so very sadly for us, he did. With one last gurgling
breath, my bold, driven, stubborn, gentle father lay back on his pillows
and was gone.
Three months later I gave birth to his namesake, Jack. He came from
my belly with a huge gasp of air and his naked body was laid on my chest.
I put my face to his neck, breathed in deeply, and closed my eyes. A life
ended, a life begun. None of it was easy, but I wouldn’t have missed
either experience for the world.
What struck me, having these two events juxtaposed like this, was that
people had so much advice about delivering a baby — what to eat,
how to breathe, what medications to avoid — but they were eerily
silent on the subject of death. No advice. No comments. Not a word about
it. It was as if by not mentioning it, they could make it go away.
I was still thinking about this inconsistency a few weeks later when
I returned to work. I had to finish the last chapters of a book I was
writing on aging parents, which meant I had to interview people about
death. What I heard were not stories of laughter and tears and reminiscing,
but tales of agonizing deaths and lasting regrets. What I heard was, “He
wouldn’t have wanted it like that. ... I don’t know how it
happened. ... ” And I heard it over and over and over.
Despite any advance directives written or promises made, the vast majority
of people die exactly as they don’t want to: hooked to a web of
tubes and machines, distanced from those they love, in pain, afraid, and
alone. This is obviously horrendous for the patient, but it is also a
nightmare for family members and other loved ones, as this is their final
gift, their send-off, and it is the setting for their ensuing grief.
I had to find out, Why do we die like this? So once I finished the book
on aging, I set out to learn about death.
Most doctors, and the health care system as a whole, are abysmal at
dealing with death. But what I discovered, after several years of research,
is that we — the loved ones — are largely to blame. We say
with confidence that we will “pull the plug” when “it’s
time.” We know what we need to do. We won’t let our father/wife/sister/son
suffer a long and agonizing death. But standing there, at the bedside
of someone we love, with our hearts breaking into a zillion pieces, the
decisions are suddenly far more complicated and the emotions far more
acute than we ever anticipated. We have no experience, no role models,
no preparation for this. And so, in a fog of pain and denial, we gasp,
“Do something. Don’t let him die.” We say, “It’s
not time. We’re not there. Not yet.”
Medicine has delayed death, but it also has complicated it enormously.
These days we are not simply deciding whether to “pull the plug”
when all hope is gone. No, more often than not, we are deciding whether
to proceed with surgery, antibiotics, transfusions, dialysis, an experimental
round of chemo. We are weighing odds and possibilities and unknowns. We
are no longer deciding if life is viable; we’re deciding if it is
desirable.
And so we wait because we’re not “there,” not yet.
But there is no black-and-white line between living and dying, no obvious
moment when we should switch tracks from invasive, life-sustaining treatment
to comfort care. We wait to be “there,” and in waiting, we
end up exactly where we didn’t want to be.
If we are going to help the people we love through this passage so that
they find comfort and reassurance in their final days, we need to learn
something about how death occurs today — the choices that arise,
the possibilities that exist, and the obstacles that frequently stand
in the way. We also need to talk about death, to find out what our loved
ones mean when they say, “Pull the plug when I’m there,”
what they fear, hope for, dread, and believe. What would they find unbearable?
What would they find comforting? What do they think about hospice care,
experimental procedures, pain? In other words, how do they want us to
make decisions when it’s our turn to stand at that bedside?
I wrote a book on death in the hope that people would flip through it
— now, while they and their loved ones are still healthy —
and they would learn something, anything, that might one day change the
way they handle death. But in the process, something astonishing happened.
You might think that a person who spends a lot of time studying death
would get depressed. Suicidal, even. But death is an odd thing. Sure,
it’s scary at first. It’s unsettling and painful and it makes
you cry. You desperately want to think about something else, anything
else. For a while, every headache is a tumor; every mole, melanoma; every
phone call, a disaster. But then, as you learn more, as you listen to
people and cry with them and, yes, even watch them die, you stop worrying
so much about death and start living life. Suddenly, it doesn’t
matter if cobwebs lace your ceiling or cellulite speckles your thighs.
All that matters is that your kids are fine, that you can still call your
mom, and that your spouse, despite all his annoying habits, holds you
at night.
It sounds corny, I suppose, but it’s true. Death is sad, but it
also reminds us of what’s important. It reminds us to love fully
and forgive quickly and laugh easily. It reminds us that life is not a
trip to some place, but the voyage itself. Learning about death isn’t
dangerous or scary. Learning about death teaches us about life.