Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 202
1/31/13 12:27 PM
knocking on heaven’s door
203
every knot hung a jewel, and each jewel reflected the images
of all the other jewels hanging from Indra’s net. My father’s
life was one jewel hanging from a knot in that infinite web,
and in that jewel was reflected my life, and my brothers’ lives,
and my mother’s life. Reflected there, too, were the lives of Dr.
Fales and Dr. Rogan, all of us infinitely reflecting and affecting
each other in a universe without beginning or end, where divine
energy flowed from form to form, permeated with light.
My father’s pacemaker and our broken human lives ticked
on, not in a universe governed by a god whose rules were written
on tablets and interpreted by male priests who’d never spent a
day changing adult diapers or listening to the moans of a Nancy
Cruzan. They ticked on in a world that could not be reduced to
bioethical legalisms, sophistry, evasion, and double-talk.
In the world we lived in, every act and failure to act trailed in
their wake widening ripples of suffering. Nowhere I looked did I
find Avalokitesvara, the Indian bodhisattva with a hundred eyes
and hands who hears the cries of the world and reaches out to
help using whatever tool might do the trick. Rarely did I even
find the word “suffering” written, much less a map for what to
do when the ones you love are drowning in it.
Two women rang my parents’ doorbell and introduced them-
selves. One was an occupational therapist and the other a visit-
ing nurse. Unbeknownst to us, Dr. Fales, alarmed by my father’s
frequent falls, had referred us to a program I’d never heard of,
called palliative care. I would later learn that it is a relatively
new medical specialty with a philosophy akin to hospice but
better integrated into medical and hospital practice. Palliative
care, the nurse explained, offered home visits, a coordinated
medical team, and a social worker. Unlike hospice, it did not
require a medical finding that my father would die within six
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 203
1/31/13 12:27 PM
204
katy butler
months. The emphasis would be on caring—for all of us—
rather than trying to cure my incurable father. The nurse gave
my mother the phone number of a “lift and assist” service at
the fire department, an alternative to 911, to help her get my
father up without facing a push to take him to the emergency
room. The occupational therapist walked through the house
and pointed out small rugs that could be taken up to lessen the
chance of my father falling. She suggested my mother buy a
commode and a baby monitor for my father’s bedroom.
Finally we were not alone.
At dinner I saw my father examine the plastic DNR bracelet
on his wrist, trying to read its blurred words with slow, parrot-
like curiosity. Nobody, I sensed, had talked to him about it.
What would we say?
As my parents and I finished watching the news together, the
doorbell rang, Alice Teng walked in, and my father brightened.
He rose unsteadily to roll the television back to its accustomed
nook, but my mother sharply said no: he’d recently tipped it
over. “You show me how, Jeff,” Alice said gracefully, and he obe-
diently hovered behind her as she rolled it away. He followed
her to the stair glide, where she helped him sit down, showed
him again where to put his feet, buckled him in, and pressed
the button gliding him upward. I did not believe in angels, but
I thanked whatever powers there might be for Alice. Jesus said
that the stone the builders rejected would become the corner-
stone. Alice treated my father with dignity and saved my mother
from herself and her exhaustion, leaving the house each night,
after cleaning his teeth and putting him to bed, with a cheery,
“Good Night, Jeff!” Toni was happy to let my father go for a walk
even if it meant cleaning his bottom when he got home. They
were our cornerstones. It didn’t matter that they were paid for
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 204
1/31/13 12:27 PM
knocking on heaven’s door
205
the mercy they showed us. I felt an almost religious gratitude to
Toni and Alice who gave their hearts, wisdom, and gentleness
to us, near-strangers.
The situation was better, but my mother was worse. She
could not sleep. In the mornings, when I tried to talk about
hiring someone to move in, she felt faint. She put her head
between her legs at the kitchen table. She went to the living
room and lay down on the sofa.
I joined my mother in her yoga routine as my father slept. As we
stretched our backs up and down in cat-and-cow, she told me,
for the third time since my plane landed, that I looked anorexic.
Again I felt my heart sink and again I asked her to drop it. Would
I never be okay in her eyes—not too thin or too fat, too close
or too distant, too bossy or too meek, too needy or too indepen-
dent, too sloppily dressed or wearing too many colors? “Katy,”
she said, “You have no sense of humor!”
When we were done, I went upstairs, changed out of my yoga
clothes, and quietly called Southwest to move my reservation a
day closer. I was not going to criticize, condemn, or complain.
I knew that the only way to win an argument with my mother
was to avoid one. When she started needling me like this, I told
myself, it was her way of saying it was time I went home.
I took my father for a last walk later that morning, the two
of us heading down the margin of the busy road to the old
Cenacle convent. We planned to walk to a stop sign a long
block from the house. His wheezing was so loud that it fright-
ened me. When I suggested turning back, he spat out, between
labored breaths, with the old contempt I remembered well
from our warring years, ‘You’re . . . the One . . . that’s
Scared,
”
and marched doggedly on. The stroke-damaged man who had
walked by himself to the Wesleyan pool three times a week was
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 205
1/31/13 12:27 PM
206
katy butler
a superhero in comparison with the angry shut-in old body now
shuffling beside me.
At lunch, my mother took my hand. “I don’t want you to
leave,” she said, and she began to weep. “I want you to stay
longer.” I looked into her blue eyes, swimming with tears, and
held her hand: she was raw, open, loving, honest, and beautiful.
I didn’t say, I
can’t bear you calling me anorexic
. I didn’t say,
Stop
and I’ll stay
. I stroked her hand and made comforting noises, but I made no move to change my flight.
The morning I was set to go home to San Francisco, I hesi-
tated at my father’s door, and then went in and woke him. It was
6:30, and the sky was dark outside the window. He opened his
eyes and smiled at me. “Toni’s taking me to the airport,” I said,
not sure if he would understand.
“Should I get up? Am I coming?” he said.
“No,” I said, and kissed him on the cheek. “Good-bye,” I
said. “Go back to sleep. I love you.”
Three weeks later, my mother called me in California and
said, “Come.”
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 206
1/31/13 12:27 PM
V
Acceptance
Winter at Pine Street, Middletown, Connecticut.
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 207
1/31/13 12:27 PM
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 208
1/31/13 12:27 PM
My father’s bronchitis had worsened. My mother had not
called a doctor. In the daytime, he slept. At night he
thrashed around in their old master bedroom, sometimes get-
ting up and falling, as my mother, drained of sleep, listened via
the baby monitor from the guest bedroom and came in to get
him back into bed. His breathing grew worse, his mind more agi-
tated. The palliative care nurse came one morning and put her
ear on his gurgling chest. He had pneumonia, she said. He was
finally dying decisively enough to qualify for hospice. Thanks to
our involvement with her program, he would not meet his death
in intensive care after a panicked stop in an emergency room.
The nurse called the hospital and made the arrangements, and
my mother called an ambulance. He was taken to Middlesex
Hospital’s inpatient hospice unit, fighting as if for his life, kick-
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 209
1/31/13 12:27 PM
210
katy butler
ing and biting and telling the orderlies to “bugger off.” Toni vis-
ited. She asked him if he knew who she was, and he opened one
eye and fixed her with a baleful and knowing look. He ate a full
dinner, and then was shot full of morphine.
By the time I got there, he was lying silently in bed, his lungs
slowly filling with fluid, unreachable, his eyes shut, breathing as
hard and regularly as a machine.
The hospice unit was homey and peaceful. Pamphlets told
us that my father’s hearing would be the last sense to go. They
suggested we read aloud to him, play his favorite music, and
say whatever in our hearts was left unsaid. At the end of the
hall was a carpeted living room with a phone and a comfort-
able couch and videotapes for the families. There was a nonde-
nominational chapel about twice the size of a walk-in closet, a
kitchen, a coffee machine, and a refrigerator full of sheet cake.
My mother knelt by his bed, holding his hand and stroking
his hair, weeping and begging for forgiveness for her impatience.
The beginnings of a tear oozed out from under my father’s eye-
lid, and a nurse said to my mother,
Stop. You’re making him cry
.
I was again ambushed by their love and my continuing failure
to understand it.
My mother sat by him in agony. She beseeched the doctors
and nurses to increase his morphine dose and end his suffering.
She kept asking about turning off the pacemaker. By the time
the hospice unit called Dr. Rogan’s cardiology practice it was a
Saturday, and the doctor on call refused to authorize its deac-
tivation. No message was apparently given to Dr. Rogan, who
later told me that he’d have turned it off if he’d known. A month
after my father’s death, a joint committee of the American
Heart Association, the Heart Rhythm Society, and the Ameri-
can College of Cardiology would issue a “consensus statement”
declaring that it was morally and legally acceptable to deacti-
vate a pacemaker if the patient wished, and that it was neither
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 210
1/31/13 12:27 PM
knocking on heaven’s door
211
assisted suicide nor euthanasia. That would come, of course,
too late for us.
And so followed five days of hard labor.
Love can look heartless. We did not give my father oxy-
gen or food or an IV of saline or a cup of water. If we had, we
would only have slowed the shutting-down of his organs and the
drawn-out process of his death. A nurse told us that dying from
not eating or drinking is not painful, and I myself had fasted
for days without distress, but I could not forget the gospel of
Matthew, in which Jesus says, “For I was hungry, and you gave
me meat; I was thirsty, and you gave me drink.” Never before in
history have so many sons, daughters, and spouses been forced
to treat someone they love like this at the end.
We would not treat a dog this way.
When death takes just a few days, it is easy, or at least pos-
sible, to hold the dying person in the center of one’s attention.
When one has already attended a slowly dying person for years,
it’s harder. I could barely bear to be there and listen to his labored
breathing and my mother’s weeping. I left my mother with him
and went to Pelton’s drugstore on Main Street and bought a copy
of
Elle
magazine. I came back to the hospital and waited for my
brothers to come and for my father to die. I went shopping for
shoes at Marshall’s, once with my mother and once alone. I came
back in my new shoes and sat by his bed and read
Elle
and held