Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
I had come to long for the machine in my father’s heart to fail.
How we got there is a long story, but here are a few of the bones.
On November 13, 2001, when he was seventy-nine and appar-
ently vigorous, my father suffered a devastating stroke. A year
later—gravely disabled yet clear-minded enough to know it—
he was outfitted with a pacemaker in a moment of hurry and
hope. The device kept his heart going while doing nothing to
prevent his slide, over five years, into dementia, incontinence,
near-muteness, misery, and helplessness. The burden of his
care crushed my mother. In January 2007, when my father no
longer understood the purpose of a dinner napkin, I learned
that his pacemaker could be turned off painlessly and without
surgery, thus opening a door to a relatively peaceful death. It
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was a death I both feared and desired, as I sat at the kitchen
table ten months later, watching my mother’s face as she raised
her head from her knees.
Her words thrummed inside me:
Help me get your father’s
pacemaker turned off.
I’d been hoping for months to hear her
say something like this, but now that she’d spoken, I was the
one with doubts. This was a moral choice for which neither
the Anglicanism of my English childhood nor my adopted Bud-
dhism had prepared me. I shook when I imagined watching
someone disable his pacemaker—and shook even more when I
contemplated trying to explain it to him.
At the same time, I feared that if I did nothing, his doctors
would continue to prolong what was left of my father’s life until
my mother went down with him. My fear was not unfounded:
in the 1980s, while working as a reporter for the
San Francisco
Chronicle,
I spent six weeks in the intensive care unit of San
Francisco General Hospital, watching the erasure of the once-
bright line between saving a life and prolonging a dying. I’d
never forgotten what I’d seen.
If my father got pneumonia, once called “the old man’s friend”
for its promise of an easy death, a doctor might well feel duty-
bound to prescribe antibiotics. If he collapsed and my mother
called 911, paramedics would do everything they could to revive
him as they rushed his gurney toward the emergency room.
With just a little more bad luck, my father might be wheeled
into an intensive care unit, where my mother and I—and even my
dying father—could become bystanders in a battle, fought over the
territory of his body, between the ancient reality of death and the
technological imperatives of modern medicine. It was not how we
wanted him to die, but our wishes might not mean much. Three-
quarters of Americans want to die at home, as their ancestors did,
but only a quarter of the elderly currently do. Two fifths of deaths
now take place in a hospital, an institution where only the desti-
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tute and the homeless died before the dawn of the twentieth cen-
tury. Most of us say we don’t want to die “plugged into machines,”
but a fifth of American deaths now take place in intensive care,
where ten days of futile flailing can cost as much as $323,000. If
my mother and I did not veer from the pathway my father was trav-
eling, he might well draw his last breath in a room stripped of any
reminder of home or of the sacred, among doctors and nurses who
knew his blood counts and oxygen levels but barely knew his name.
Then again, the hospital might save his life and return him
home to suffer yet another final illness. And that I feared almost
as much.
I loved my father—even as he was, miserable, damaged, and
nearly incommunicado. I loved my mother and wanted her to
have at least a chance at a happy widowhood. I felt like my
father’s executioner, and that I had no choice.
I met my mother’s eyes and said yes.
I did not know the road we would travel, only that I’d made
a vow. In the six months that followed, I would learn much
about the implications of that vow and about the workings of
pacemakers and of human hearts, about law and medicine and
guilt, about money and morality. I would take on roles I never
imagined could be played by a loving daughter. I would watch
my father die laboriously with his pacemaker still ticking. After
his death, I would not rest until I understood better why the
most advanced medical care on earth, which saved my father’s
life at least once when he was a young man, succeeded at the
end mainly in prolonging his suffering.
Researching a magazine article and then this book, I would
discover something about the perverse economic incentives
within medicine—and the ignorance, fear, and hope within
our own family—that promoted maximum treatment. I would
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contemplate the unintended consequences of medical technol-
ogy’s frighteningly successful war on natural death and its ban-
ishment of the “Good Death” our ancestors so prized. Armed
with that bitter wisdom, I would support my mother when she
reclaimed her moral authority, defied her doctors, refused a
potentially life-extending surgery, and faced her own death the
old-fashioned way: head on.
My mother and I often felt like outliers, but I know now that we
were not alone. Thanks to a cavalcade of relatively recent medi-
cal advances ranging from antibiotics and vaccines to dialysis,
911 systems, and airport defibrillators, elderly people now sur-
vive repeated health crises that once killed them. The “oldest
old” are the nation’s most rapidly growing age group. But death
is wily. Barred from bursting in like an armed man, it wages a
war of attrition. Eyesight dims, joints stiffen, heartbeats slow,
veins clog, lungs and bowels give out, muscles wither, kidneys
weaken, brains shrink. Half of Americans eighty-five or over
need help with at least one practical, life-sustaining activity, like
getting dressed or eating breakfast. Nearly a third have some
form of dementia, and more develop it with each year of addi-
tional longevity. The burden of helping them falls heavily on
elderly wives and middle-aged daughters, with the remainder
provided by sons and husbands, hired caregivers, assisted living
complexes, and nursing homes.
Every day across the country, family caregivers find them-
selves pondering a medical procedure that may save the life—or
prevent the dying—of someone beloved and grown frail. When
is it time to say “No” to a doctor? To say, “Enough”? The ques-
tions surface uneasily in medical journals and chat rooms, in
waiting rooms, and in conversations between friends. However
comfortingly the question is phrased, there is no denying that
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the answer, given or avoided, will shape when and how some-
one we love meets death. This is a burden not often carried by
earlier generations of spouses, sons, and daughters. We are in a
labyrinth without a map.
Before I shepherded my parents through to their deaths, I
thought that medical overtreatment was mainly an economic
problem: a quarter of Medicare’s roughly $560 billion in annual
outlays covers medical care in the last year of life. After my
father’s death, I understood the human costs. After my mother’s
death, I saw that there could be another path.
In our family’s case, the first crucial fork in the road appeared
six years before my father died, in the fall of 2001. It began with
a family crisis, an invitation to a distant daughter to open her
heart, and a seemingly minor medical decision: a pacemaker
proposed in the aftermath of a catastrophic stroke.
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I
Redemption
Jeffrey and Valerie Butler, Yale University,
New Haven, Connecticut, 1990.
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a Blackbird
The King was in his counting house,
Counting out his money.
The Queen was in the parlor
Eating bread and honey.
The Maid was in the garden,
Hanging out the clothes.
Along came a blackbird
And snipped off her nose.
—English nursery rhyme
Until my parents entered their late seventies, my two
younger brothers and I—all of us long settled in Califor-
nia—assumed, when we thought about it at all, that they would
have robust, vigorous old ages, capped by some brief and vaguely
imagined final illness. In my personal fantasy, death would meet
my father suddenly after a happy afternoon in my mother’s gar-
den, blowing leaves into piles with a rented leaf blower.
Slim and energetic, my parents exercised daily and ate plenty of
fish, vegetables, and fruit. Thanks to good doctors and their own
healthy habits, they seemed to be among the lucky ones for whom
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katy butler
modern medicine, despite its inequities and waste, works quite
well. Medicare and supplemental insurance covered their visits to
the occasional specialist and to their trusted internist, a lean and
bespectacled man in his late forties named Dr. Robert Fales. They
didn’t have bodies of iron, like some of the graying triathletes I saw
at my local swimming pool. But they seemed to be enjoying the
thriving, unscathed version of “young old age” that I frequently saw
displayed in newspaper features and in the AARP magazine.
They were also stoics and religious agnostics, skeptical of
medical overdoing. They’d signed living wills and durable power
of attorney documents for health care. My mother, who’d sur-
vived cancer and watched friends die of it, even had an under-
lined copy of the Hemlock Society’s
Final Exit
on her bookshelf.
They had been, by and large, in control of their lives, and they
did not expect to lose control of their deaths.
Then came the stroke, on the afternoon of November 13, 2001.
The day dawned crisp and clear, a Tuesday in late fall, nine days
before Thanksgiving and two months after the attacks on the
World Trade Center. My mother had recently turned seventy-
seven, my father, seventy-nine. They meditated together for
half an hour in the living room and then took their customary
brisk two-mile walk down to the Wesleyan campus to pick up
the day’s
New York Times
from a free rack funded by a wealthy
alumnus. The Leonid meteor shower was expected before dawn
the following Sunday, and they made plans to get up early to
watch the bright rain of shooting stars.
My father helped unload the dishwasher. My mother filled
cereal bowls with muesli, All-Bran, soaked prunes, cashews, and
apricots. In matching blue-and-white saucers she placed a hand-
ful of vitamins recommended by the Center for Science in the
Public Interest, along with a diuretic for her moderately high
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blood pressure and a generic pill for his enlarged prostate. After
breakfast, she headed upstairs to make their twin beds in the mas-
ter bedroom: they no longer shared a bed because of my father’s
snoring. My father went into the second upstairs bathroom—the
one my two brothers and I shared when we were younger—and,
for the last time in his life, took a shower on his own and shaved.
A few hours later, I awoke in the flats of Mill Valley, Cali-
fornia, in the redwood house I’d just begun to share with my
partner, Brian Donohue, whom I’d met in a salsa class a year