Today is the one year anniversary of my mother's death, and if you have been reading this blog for any period of time you know that I'm a big one for anniversaries. So here are my current thoughts on this anniversary, which is also a review of what lead up to Mom's death.
My
mother was 92 yo. In her long life she had been an editor, a counselor at a
weight reduction place, and then an area manager for a group that brought over
foreign exchange students. And a writer, always a writer. Intelligent, well
informed, and very erudite. By the time she was in her 70s, though, she seemed
older. Always short, she started shrinking more and more, that accelerated in
her 80s as more and more vertebra collapsed, until she was down to only 4’5”.
The Parkinson’s hit when she was in her mid-80s. The symptoms began as
relatively mild but, as is usual, it affected her balance. In April 2017,
at 87 yo, she fell, taking only a couple
steps away from her walker to dispose of junk mail, and broke her pelvis in
several places. That was when things really went downhill. In a lot of ways the
day she fell was the day my mother died.
The
pelvic fractures along with all her other medical issues lead to her bladder
being non-functioning, so she needed an indwelling bladder catheter. There is a
huge psychological toll when you can no longer toilet yourself, it was
completely understandable that she became more and more depressed. Her
arthritis meant she couldn’t empty the bag herself, she had to move to the
assisted living floor, surrounded by people who weren’t nearly as sharp as she
still was. She was excited at one dinner when she had a spirited conversation
with another resident in their dining room, but her hopes of a mental equal
were dashed the following night when the woman sat across from her and
proceeded to repeat everything she had said the night before.
Over
the next few years Mom asked me repeatedly when she would die, she didn’t want
to be in this body. Things got worse during the pandemic, when she was
restricted to her room for months at a time. She told me she had never thought
she would be grateful for the urine bag which needed to be emptied several
times a day, but it meant face-to-face time with staff members. Once the
pandemic was over it was obvious that it had taken it’s toll, yet her body
continued to function. She went out of her way to find something positive or
funny to have as conversation every day, but it just got harder and harder.
More and more she said to me ‘How can I die? What can I do to die?’ The only
option she had was to stop fluids & food, something called VSED: voluntary stoppage
of eating and drinking. She said she wasn’t ready.
Then
the Parkinson’s started affecting her mouth and tongue. She had to move food
with her hands to get it in the right place in her mouth so she could swallow.
It was humiliating, she took to eating in her apartment rather than in the
dining room, too embarrassed to be seen putting her fingers in her mouth over
and over. Then, last summer, it affected her speech, she couldn’t form words
and her voice became so soft and indistinct that even the Alexa echo dot
couldn’t respond. For her that was the final straw. With the blessing of her
internist she went on hospice, and stopped eating. She was happier than I’d
seen her in years.
In
11 other states in the country there is something called Medical Aid in Dying,
MAiD. It’s designed for those who have cancer or other fatal diseases, it means
you can go to your doctor and, after jumping through several hoops, get a
prescription to end your life. You can have control over when you die, you can
spare yourself the agony of continuing to deteriorate, be in pain, unable to
function. But Pennsylvania won’t pass the legislation, so someone like my
mother, suffering for years, knowing everything would get worse, has no other
choice but to starve themselves. This is clearly a massive dichotomy in a
country that supposedly honors each person’s right to happiness.
The
first 10 days after she stopped eating she was more content, more relaxed. Word
spread in her community, where she’d lived for 20 years, and friends stopped by
to say goodbye. Several of them told her how much she had meant to them, how
things she wrote gave them joy, the biographies of new residents that she wrote
made their moving in easier. I was with her every day, witnessed this, and it
was beautiful, sort of a living funeral, where the person gets to hear all the
wonderful things people say instead of at a memorial when it no longer matters
to them.
Mom
was a Baha’I, a fairly small religion with a lot of rules around burial. I’d
already bought a cemetery plot she approved of, and she watched with pleasure
as the items required accumulated in her room: the white silk shroud to be
buried in, the rose oil, the ring that is placed on the deceased that says in
Arabic that you are going back to God. Friends from her religion came and
prayed with her, as I sat back respectfully observing.
She’d
stopped any food intake, but the day after she stopped eating I offered her
some chocolate, and her face lit up with a child’s delight. I assured her that
it wouldn’t impact the dying process, and she seemed to like the secret
cheating that only the two of us knew about. I brought her brownies and candy,
she’d only eat a little, but would always smile broadly and her face would
brighten as she savored the taste.
Ten
days without food, but she was drinking a lot of fluid. She’d asked if she
could stop the ‘damn CPAP’ since she wanted to die, but without the humidified
air she would wake with her mouth dry and uncomfortable. She was definitely
fading, but it wasn’t fast enough for her. When we were alone that night she
struggled to sit up a bit more, looked me directly in the eyes and said ‘How
can I die faster?’. She knew I’d be honest with her, that was our agreement. I
looked back at her and said ‘I will never deprive you of anything you ask for,
so know that, before I tell you how you can speed the process: you will die
more quickly if you stop drinking anything other than a small amount of fluid
with your pills.’ She nodded her comprehension, and just said simply ‘ok’. And
that was it. She stopped drinking fluids cold turkey. I admired her bravery,
something she’d never displayed much of before, but she had made a decision
that she was going to die, and damnit, she was going to do it as quickly as
possible.
She
faded more quickly then, and I stopped giving her chocolate, because her mouth
was too dry to safely swallow anymore. Five days later she was sleeping more,
barely talking. The hospice nurse came on Monday and said she thought Mom would
die by the end of the week, when I repeated this to her she responded “Good’,
and that was pretty much the last she spoke.
It
still took another five days, but she was unconscious by then. She developed
bed sores incredibly quickly, and I begged for the morphine, but it wasn’t
given as often as it should have been. Her eyes sank in, her gums receded, her
body shriveled down more and more until she no longer looked like herself. And
all I could think of was how unfair it was that this was her only option, this
difficult choice. At least by that time she wasn’t suffering, it was harder on
me watching. I tamped down my anger at a medical system that forces this
horrible way of dying on our elderly and sick.
In
the prior weeks she had talked excitedly about people she would see on the
other side, in the Baha’I belief of heaven. After she became unconscious I
continued to talk to her, to remind her of all those people. When you reach
almost 93 yo most of your friends & relatives are gone, so I told her that
there would be quite a crowd to greet her. I didn’t talk incessantly, but
always spoke as if she could hear and understand me.
On
Saturday I knew it was close, she was breathing about 40 times a minute, her
core was very hot but her arms and feet, drawn up in the fetal position, were
ice cold. Her heart rate was about 120, the fluttering in her neck easy to see
with her dehydrated body so shrunken. Mom really only wanted me with her,
except for one friend for a few hours in the mornings before my arrival. I’d
been pushing myself constantly for over three weeks, had taken up the offer of
my cousins to support me by staying at my house. Beth looked at me that morning
and said in her typical blunt fashion ‘You look horrible. You can’t keep this
up, you’re going to get sick. I’m coming over at 2:00 and you’re coming home to
rest. I’ll stay with her, you have to have a break.’
At
about 1:00 I said to my unconscious mother ‘Mom, if you want to die with it
just being me with you then you’ll have to do it soon, because Beth will be
over in about an hour. So just know if you want only me with you it needs to be
soon.’ Less than 20 minutes later her
breathing dramatically changed, I began reading her the Baha’I prayer she
wanted said over her, it was only the second time through reading the piece
when the pulsing in her neck stopped, and she was gone.
I
sat there with her for 10 minutes, not calling anyone, because you never have
that time again, those moments right after a person leaves this world, and
regardless of your beliefs in a spirit or an afterlife, that time is sacred. So
I just sat with her body, and honored that transition, glad that she had gotten
her wish and was no longer suffering. I hope there was a big happy party
waiting for her, and everything that she wanted from heaven.
A
nice woman from the hospice bereavement program called me today to check on how
I was doing. She told me how difficult the first year always was, and with the
holidays coming up it would be normal for the grief to be worse. But it isn’t,
because my Mom changed from who she was years ago, and I’d already grieved that
loss. My only emotion a year later is a quiet joy that I was able to advocate
for her to give her what she wanted, and know she’s at peace. And that deserves
celebrating, not grief. I’m going to quietly
honor her passing with happiness, because she shed the broken, worn out painful
physical body that ruined her last years.
I
don’t believe in a Christian heaven, with pearly gates and streets of gold, but
I ardently believe in a spirit that continues on after this world. Anne Morrow
Lindburgh said ‘We are not snuffed out at death, but absorbed into a larger
flame.’ My comforting image of Mom is of
pure spirit, released, able to swoop and swoosh up & down without limits,
communicate easily with other spirits, be enveloped by pure love from that
which is greater than ourselves, which some people call God. No longer pinned
down in a limiting body she is joyful and happy and no longer in any pain or
discomfort.
Party
on Mom, I just know you’re having a wonderful time.
10 Comments:
At 5:53 PM,
Anonymous said…
Hello, Laurie and now I must let you know how moving was your narrative about your mother’ departure anniversary! It is a not just feeling it is a human connection Of mother and daughter at the end of one’s life. Your emotional narrative speaks many volumes, it is a conversation helping many of us to heal our won wounds!
At 1:40 AM,
Anonymous said…
Bless you that was beautifully written thank you
Deneen
At 4:40 AM,
Anonymous said…
Have a blessed holiday!
Deneen
At 1:40 PM,
Anonymous said…
Have a blessed 2024.
Deneen
At 3:30 AM,
Anonymous said…
Happy Easter
Deneen
At 10:22 AM,
Anonymous said…
Hi Laurie,
Hope your spring and summer are awesome
Deneen
At 1:55 AM,
Anonymous said…
Hi Laurie ,
Thinking of you. Hope that foot is treating you better.
Be careful in the close to 100degree heat this week
Deneen
At 2:36 AM,
Anonymous said…
Hi Laurie,
Summer coming to a close, hope it was good to you.
Feels like it going to be a cold winter, be safe out there
Deneen
At 2:07 AM,
Anonymous said…
Happy fall , leaves are changing¡
At 5:17 AM,
Anonymous said…
Hi Laurie,
Think of you this Oct.
Deneen
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