Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
that political opponents have attacked as putting the fate of the
elderly into the hands of “faceless bureaucrats”—rather than
with the corporate and commercial lobbies and their allies in
Congress, where it effectively rests now.
Anyone who attempts to open a public conversation about rehu-
manizing modern death must be prepared to weather charges of
rationing, promoting “death panels,” canonizing Dr. Kevorkian,
and discriminating against the aged, demented, or disabled. But
the phrase “death panels” glosses over the fact that the mor-
tality rate remains at 100 percent. The word “rationing” avoids
the reality that our current way of dying maximizes both cost
and suffering. Vilifying Dr. Kevorkian ignores the problem that
many saw him as solving: compulsory longevity, and the loss of
autonomy at the end of life to medical overdoing. Charges of
discrimination cannot mask the reality that many people con-
sider dementia a worse fate than death: it is the demented with
no close relatives who are most likely to be subjected to feeding
tubes and other life-prolonging and suffering-prolonging mea-
sures. It is not age discrimination to acknowledge the reality
that eighty-year-old bodies and brains don’t bounce back the
way young ones do, or that in the end even marathoners’ bodies
crumble in seven thousand irreversible ways, no matter how
much technology is deployed.
One sign of the growing power of a grassroots Slow Medicine
lobby can be found in New York State, where a bill promoted by
Compassion and Choices and passed overwhelmingly in 2011
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over strong opposition from the American Medical Association,
now requires doctors to provide honest information and coun-
seling to terminally ill patients about palliative care and hos-
pice. But until we join most of the rest of the developed world in
a universal, non-profit-driven health care system, it will remain
extraordinarily difficult to follow the pathway to a Good Death,
whether for yourself or for someone you love and have become
responsible for.
Of course we don’t want to die. We don’t want to say good-bye to
those we love. We certainly don’t want to be the one who says to a
doctor, “Enough.” In this we are not alone. Our ancestors did not
want to die any more than we do. Sixteenth-century lithographs
show Death as a grinning skeleton who grabs a wrist and insists
on dancing with farmers, apprentices, matrons, and business-
men, all of them protesting that they have much more important
things to do than die. But sooner or later, dance we must.
Things go better if we practice the steps of the dance before-
hand. Perhaps if we find ways to make the pathway to natural
death sacred and familiar again, we will recover the courage
to face our deaths. If we don’t, technological medicine at the
end of life will continue to collude with our fear and ignorance
and to profit from it. Unless we create new rites of passage to
help prepare for death long before it comes, we will remain vul-
nerable to the commercial exploitation of our fears and to the
implied promise that death can forever be postponed.
Dying is a sacred act. Even in the worst of circumstances, it
can be made holy. I know a young palliative care physician who
honored a nursing-home resident who died peacefully on her unit
by gathering her staff around his bed and reading a Mary Oliver
poem aloud over him—a secular blessing and an honorable good-
bye for a man who died without kin. I know a former pediatric
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katy butler
oncology nurse who would take parents aside during a child’s pro-
tracted and painful dying and tell them that they needed to let the
child know that it was okay to die. After the parents’ good-byes
were said, the nurse told me, the child would often die peace-
fully, the family having been given a healing and unbillable gift, a
throwback to a time when nurses were called “sister” and nursing
was a religious vocation as well as a profession. Even many of the
least formally religious yearn intuitively to be at peace with those
we love and to resolve what remains unresolved.
It is time to honor the compassionate impulses of doctors
and nurses who labor within time pressures and administra-
tive structures that militate against accepting, discussing, and
honoring dying. It is unlikely that we will ever again see most
deaths taking place inside the home. So we may as well as admit
that intensive care units and medical floors are, like it or not,
hospices as well as places of lifesaving. The conference rooms
where families are asked to assent to removal of life support
are locations of a sacred passage and a ritual of letting-go. They
should be as beautiful as those near labor and delivery rooms,
with quilts on the walls, rocking chairs, and bulletin boards full
of the photos of elderly people who have died on the unit, the
way obstetricians often put up photographs of babies. They
should not be places where the remnants of staff lunches are
left, or schedules posted on walls. Even in our secular and mul-
tireligious culture, we could show our caring for these trauma-
tized families with framed poems, or photographs of the cosmos
or a lotus blossom, or any other nonspecific aspect of the sacred.
The Good Death, as our ancestors defined it, was a natural
death free of medical flailing. It did not require experts. It took
place at home and was neither sudden nor lingering. Just as we
do now, our ancestors hoped to die in a familiar place among
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close friends or family; to be safe and gently cared-for in their
hour of need; to have their last words heard and treasured; to
express their love and forgiveness and to hear that they were
loved and forgiven in turn. The impulse for the Good Death
may be bred into our bones: it was once so strong that soldiers
on Civil War battlefields did their best to recreate it symboli-
cally, propping photographs of their mothers or sisters on their
chests as they died far from home.
The religious among our ancestors, and there were many,
used their dying moments to express their faith in God and their
acceptance of his will, to repent of their sins, and to prepare
their minds and souls for heaven. In the days before widespread
use of effective pain medicine, the Good Death was not neces-
sarily painless or peaceful. Our ancestors spoke of the “death
agony” and the “death throes” for a reason. But it was an honest
death. Nobody pretended that death was not in the room.
A brave death, to our ancestors, was one of acceptance.
Today, as a glance at any day’s obituaries will show, we are divided
between those who “died peacefully, surrounded by family,” and
those honored for never giving up “the brave fight against cancer,”
fighting death in all its guises, and never letting go.
My mother’s death showed me another kind of courage, as I
hope it has shown you. It will teach me for the rest of my life.
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A Map through
the Labyrinth
What I wish I’d known:
The honest, natural death is no longer the default
pathway. If you want it for yourself or for someone you love, it is
up to you to seek it out, and it is harder to find the way to it than
you may think. It is not enough to sign all the right papers or to
tell your friends you never want to be plugged into machines,
because important decisions must be made long before your gur-
ney is brought to the door of the emergency room after a pan-
icked call to 911. Every mile on the way to a bad death, every
“yes” to a doctor for a last-ditch treatment, every dishonest hope,
may look at the time like an expression of your love and caring.
The default pathway to a disempowered Fast Medicine death
is a wide freeway with smooth, well-lit on-ramps and misleading
signage about the final destination. Over time, the cars on that
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A Map through the Labyrinth
freeway move faster and the off-ramps grow fewer, and you may
find yourself funneled toward a single stopping-point, a never-
say-die death in intensive care. There, at the very last moment,
unfamiliar doctors may off-load onto your relatives the crushing
moral burden of assenting to the discontinuance of life support.
The pathway to a natural death, on the other hand, is not so
easily found. The gate may be overgrown. You will have to use
your own moral compass to find it, guided by your guts, your
love, and whatever support group you can scrape together. You
will have to face your fears and let go of denial and hope. That
is what it takes to give yourself or someone you love a chance
at the kind of death our ancestors held in high esteem. You may
feel alone, but you will not be alone.
The Slow Medicine path to death is a path of acceptance.
It does not promise freedom from suffering. Its sufferings are
plainly visible. You will need to find your way to the path of
acceptance far sooner than you think, perhaps years before
the actual death takes place. This is what I learned in the
course of my parents’ journey through the valley of the shadow
of death.
Shepherding your parents—from independence to depen-
dence to contemplating death to dying itself—may take years. It
is a spiritual ordeal. Start looking for the path of acceptance at
the first body blow, the day you first recognize that your parent
will die someday. It could be the first stroke, or the first fall, the
first severe diabetic complication, or a diagnosis of an unam-
biguously fatal disease like kidney failure, emphysema, or pan-
creatic, ovarian, or metastasized cancer. It could be the day that
your mother or father loses the way home or forgets to turn off
a burner and melts a pot on the stove. Your parent has entered
the last stage of life. You cannot control whether they will die,
but you can influence the manner of their passing.
This is where the work starts. Not later. The work of death
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does not start on the day that someone says to you, “Your mother
is dying.” No one may ever say this. There will always be another
treatment.
Acceptance starts with opening your heart to the reality that
someone you love is approaching the end of his or her life. In
whatever form speaks to you, be it poetry, letters, songs, or prayer,
bring in the traditional, the holy, the beautiful. Have a birthday
party for your elderly friend and say what is in your heart rather
than saving it for the eulogy. Ask for a letter from your parent
describing the spiritual legacy he or she would like to pass on to
you. Remind yourself that this rite of passage is part of the human
condition and has been traversed by others before you. It is time
to find ways to say, “I love you. Thank you. Please forgive me. I
forgive you.” Write a legacy letter like the ones I wrote my father,
naming all he had done for me. You can do all this even if your
parent refuses to discuss the coming of death.
That way, when the time comes to say, “Good-bye”—and
that day may come more quickly than you imagined, or it may
come more slowly and require many thoughtful decisions along
the way—you are ready for that too. You may not be able to fix
your parent’s suffering or make them whole but you can heal
your relationships and help prepare everyone for death.
If you have said your good-byes, you will have a clearer
mind and heart for the hardest decisions you have ever made,
and the loneliest. In our striving secular culture, love has long
been defined as giving more—more presents, faster cars, more
medical fixes. The time comes when the most loving thing is to
actively advocate for doing less.
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Notes for
a New Art of Dying
Shepherding a parent, spouse, or friend through the last phase
of life encompasses six distinct, sometimes looping stages:
fragility, decline, disability, failing health, and active dying, and
bereavement, each one a rite of passage with its own physi-
cal and emotional tasks. These tasks include reducing expec-
tations of medicine; maximizing independence and postponing
disability; coping practically and emotionally with dependence;
preparing for death; attending at the deathbed; and mourning.
Below are some notes on each stage.