Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
horrified that my first emotion was relief. Relief for everyone involved.
If you have not been there, you just don’t get it.”
—H. M.
*Reprinted with the writers’ permission.
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“Please know that what you shared made such a huge difference in
my family’s ongoing health care crises. I learned I could say no to a
doctor. I learned I could say no to my mother. I learned from you what
the picture might likely look like at the end, and because of that, my
family was spared the ongoing onslaught of pain that you and your
father endured. I learned from you, and I pass that on to others now.”
—R. H.
“Your writing and observations are a gift. During a recent period
involving hospice and eventual death of a family member, your
vision and heart were inspiring guides. Keep opening eyes and
encouraging questions and curiosity and guided puzzlement. Peace
be with you.”
—T. A. F.
“My mother, a Phi Beta Kappa, lost her mind to Alzheimer’s. Her
greatest fear was that she would be put in a nursing home to rot
away and die. She begged my sister and me to never allow any type
of life support. She was eventually moved to a lock down dementia
unit after trying to escape the assisted living area, stark naked and
walking down the street with her walker at 2:00 a.m.
“We were told a pacemaker was needed. I am her health care
proxy and said no. The surgeon said he was putting the case to the
hospital ethics committee and I would have to deal with them. He
was quite rude, indignant, guilt provoking and you know the rest. I
reluctantly folded and let the doctor proceed.
“Yesterday was my mother’s 89th birthday. She does not know
me. She does not dress herself. She wears diapers. Her hair is fall-
ing out, her face is mottled with horrible looking spots, her ankles
are swollen and she weighs 109 pounds at 5 feet 7 inches. Your
article has given me strength, hope and options. I am sending your
article to my sister and perhaps we will do the humane thing once
and for all; disengage the pacemaker. Thank you for such an infor-
mative, moving article.”
—J. Z.
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Knocking
on
Heaven’s Door
Our Parents,Their Doctors,
and a Better Way of Death
Katy Butler
SCRIBNER
New
York London Toronto Sydney New
Delhi
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Do not quote for publication until verified with finished book. This
advance uncorrected reader’s proof is the property of Simon & Schuster. It is being loaned for promotional purposes and review by the recipient and may not be used for any other purpose or transferred to any third party.
Simon & Schuster reserves the right to cancel the loan and recall posses-sion of the proof at any time. Any duplication, sale or distribution to the public is a violation of law.
Scribner
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Copyright © 2013 by Katherine Anne Butler
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First Scribner hardcover edition September 2013
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Designed by Jill Putorti
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
ISBN 978–1–4516–4197–4
ISBN 978–1–4516–4199–8 (ebook)
Permissions and photo credits appear on page xx.
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In memory of my parents,
Valerie Joy de la Harpe and Jeffrey Ernest Butler,
In gratitude to Toni Perez-Palma and Alice Teng,
and to all caregivers,
paid and unpaid.
May You Be Peaceful and at Ease
May You Be Filled with Lovingkindness
May You Be Free from Fear and Danger
May You Be Happy
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I fell
because of wisdom,
but was not destroyed:
through her I dived
into the great sea,
and in those depths
I seized
a wealth bestowing pearl.
I descended like the great iron anchor
men use to steady their ships
in the night on rough seas,
and holding up the bright lamp
that I there received,
I climbed the rope to the boat of understanding.
While in the dark sea,
I slept, and not overwhelmed there,
dreamt: a star blazed in my womb.
I marveled at that light and grasped it,
and brought it up to the sun.
I laid hold on it, and will not let it go.
—Makeda, Queen of Sheba, translated by Jane Hirshfield
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Contents
Prologue 000
Chapter 1
Along Came a Blackbird
000
Chapter 2
The Tyranny of Hope
000
Chapter 3
Rites of Passage
000
000
Chapter 4
Fast Medicine
000
Chapter 5
Inventing Lifesaving and Transforming Death 000
Chapter 6
My Father’s Open Heart
000
Chapter 7
Not Getting Better
000
Chapter 8
Dharma Sisters
000
Chapter 9
Broke-Down Palace
000
Chapter 10
White Water
000
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Chapter 11
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
000
Chapter 12
The Business of Lifesaving
000
Chapter 13
Deactivation 000
Chapter 14
The Art of Dying
000
Chapter 15
Afterward 000
Chapter 16
Valerie Makes Up Her Mind
000
Chapter 17
Old Plum Tree Bent and Gnarled
000
Afterword: The Path to a Better Way of Death
000
A Map through the Labyrinth
000
Notes for a New Art of Dying
000
Notes 000
Author’s Note
000
Acknowledgments 000
Permissions and Credits
000
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Knocking on
Heaven’s Door
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Valerie Joy de la Harpe and Jeffrey Ernest Butler,
Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa, 1946.
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fornia, my mother made a request I dreaded and longed to
fulfill. She’d just poured me a cup of tea from her Japanese tea-
pot shaped like a little pumpkin; beyond the kitchen window,
two cardinals splashed in her birdbath in the weak Connecticut
sunlight. Her white hair was gathered at the nape of her neck,
and her voice was low. She put a hand on my arm. “Please help
me get your father’s pacemaker turned off,” she said. I met her
eyes, and my heart knocked.
Directly above us, in what was once my parents’ shared bed-
room, my eighty-five-year-old father Jeffrey—a retired Wesleyan
University professor, stroke-shattered, going blind, and suffer-
ing from dementia—lay sleeping. Sewn into a hump of skin and
muscle below his right collarbone was the pacemaker that had
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2
katy butler
helped his heart outlive his brain. As small and shiny as a pocket
watch, it had kept his heart beating rhythmically for five years.
It blocked one path to a natural death.
After tea, I knew, my mother would help my father up from
his narrow bed with its mattress encased in waterproof plastic.
After taking him to the toilet, she’d change his diaper and lead
him tottering to the living room, where he’d pretend to read a
book of short stories by Joyce Carol Oates until the book fell
into his lap and he stared out the sliding glass window.
I don’t like describing what the thousand shocks of late old age
were doing to my father—and indirectly to my mother—without
telling you first that my parents loved each other and I loved them.
That my mother could stain a deck, sew a silk blouse from a photo
in Vogue, and make coq au vin with her own chicken stock. That
her photographs of Wesleyan authors had been published on book
jackets, and her paintings of South African fish in an ichthyolo-
gists’ handbook. That she thought of my father as her best friend.
And that my father never gave up easily on anything.
Born in South Africa’s Great Karoo Desert, he was a twenty-
one-year-old soldier in the South African Army when he lost his
left arm to a German shell in the hills outside Siena in Italy. He
went on to marry my mother, earn a PhD from Oxford, coach
rugby, build floor-to-ceiling bookcases for our living room, and
with my two younger brothers as crew, sail his beloved Rhodes
19 on Long Island Sound. When I was a teenager and often at
odds with him, he would sometimes wake me chortling lines
from
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam
in a high falsetto:
“Awake, my little one! Before life’s liquor in its cup be dry!” On weekend afternoons, he would put a record on the stereo and strut
around the living room conducting invisible orchestras. At night
he would stand in our bedroom doorways and say goodnight to
my two brothers and me quoting Horatio’s farewell to the dying
Hamlet: “May flights of angels sing thee to thy rest!”
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knocking on heaven’s door
3
Four decades later, in the house where he once chortled and
strutted and sometimes thundered, I had to coach him to take
off his slippers before he tried to put on his shoes.
My mother put down her teacup. She was eighty-three, as
lucid and bright as a sword point, and more elegant in her black
jeans and thin cashmere sweater than I could ever hope to be.
She put her hand, hard, on my arm. “He is killing me,” she
said. “He. Is. Ruining. My. Life.” Then she crossed her ankles
and put her head between her knees, a remedy for near-fainting
that she’d clipped from a newspaper column and pinned to the
bulletin board behind her. She was taking care of my father for
about a hundred hours a week.
I looked at her and thought of Anton Chekhov, the writer
and physician who died of tuberculosis in 1904 when he was
only forty-four. “Whenever there is someone in a family who has
long been ill, and hopelessly ill,” he wrote, “There come pain-
ful moments when all, timidly, secretly, at the bottom of their
hearts long for his death.” A century afterward, my mother and