Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
tain Center, Hedgebrook Foundation, and Mesa Refuge gave
me respite and beautiful, calm places to write and to think dur-
ing the many years that this book was written and lived.
Scores of scientists, doctors, and academics patiently
answered my questions. I wish I could name you all. A few will
have to stand for many: Katrina Bramstedt, PhD, S. Andrew
Josephson, MD, Rita Redberg, MD, Charles Witherell, MSN,
RN, Victor Parsonnet, MD and Nicholas Tilney, MD. Numer-
ous doctors at the Mayo Clinic and elsewhere, not listed here
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314 Acknowledgments
by name, gave me an understanding of what “patient-centered
medical care” could look like. Ellen Griffith, formerly of the
Medicare communications office, was patient, heroic, gener-
ous and well informed, as were her colleagues, Helen Mulligan,
Courtney Jenkins, and Kathryn Ceja.
Jeffrey Burns, MD, of Children’s Hospital Boston, one of my
father’s former students, shared his memories of my father and
invited me to speak to his first-year students at Harvard Medical
School—the opening, I hope, of a continuing national conver-
sation among doctors and families about better shared medical
decision-making in the last phase of life. Thanks also to Joseph
Breault, MD, of Ochsner Clinics in New Orleans, for the privi-
lege of speaking at their inaugural bioethics grand rounds.
Gratitude to my dharma sisters and brothers and to the Bud-
dhist teachers who turned and opened my life: Thich Nhat
Hanh; Debra Chamberlin-Taylor and Julie Wester of Spirit
Rock; and Reb Anderson, Richard Baker, and others at San
Francisco Zen Center. I would not be who I am without you.
My late mother, Valerie, entrusted me with her journal to
include in the
New York Times
story that formed the foundation
for this book and encouraged me, despite her personal inclination
toward privacy, to write and publish our family’s story. Thank you.
I give thanks to my mother’s caregiver’s support group, to
Ben Carton, Richard Elphick, Diana Wylie, the Rev. M’Ellen
Kennedy, and to the Wesleyan community for loving and sus-
taining my family for decades, and especially to Richard Adel-
stein for taking my father to lunch.
To those who supported my parents and me during their last
eight years: Toni Perez-Palma and Alice Teng, Dr. Robert Fales,
and the emergency room, nursing, hospice, and palliative care
staffs at Middlesex Memorial Hospital in Middletown, Con-
necticut, one of the country’s finest. A special thanks to the
unnamed orderly who gave my father his first poststroke shave.
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Acknowledgments 315
I hope the book makes clear that our family’s ordeal resulted
from shortcomings in the organization of our medical system,
not failings of this excellent hospital.
Readers who responded to my story in the
New York Times
Magazine
made me understand that my mother and I were not
alone, and there was a need for this book. I especially thank
Rachel Houseman, a member of the Facebook group Slow
Medicine, who e-mailed me to say, “If it helps at 3:00 am,
please know that what you shared made such a huge differ-
ence. I learned from you what the picture might likely look like
at the end, and because of that, my family was spared the pain
that yours endured. . . . I learned from you, and I pass that on to
others now.” Rachel, believe me, it did help at 3:00 am.
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Permissions
and Credits
The author wishes to express her thanks to the authors, trans-
lators, and license holders of the following books, poems,
and photographs for permission to use their copyrighted work.
All rights are reserved by the copyright owners for the following:
Excerpt from “I Fell” by Makeda, Queen of Sheba from
Women in Praise of the Sacred,
edited by Jane Hirshfield.
Harper Collins, NY. Translation © Jane Hirshfield, 1994. Reprinted by
kind permission of Jane Hirshfield.
Excerpt from “Plum Blossoms” from
Moon in a Dewdrop
by
Dogen, translated by Kazuaki Tanahashi. Translation copyright ©
1985 by San Francisco Zen Center. Reprinted by permission of
North Point Press, a division of Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, LLC.
Excerpt from
Tao Te Ching,
translated by Stephen Mitchell.
NY, Harper & Row. Translation © 1988 by Stephen Mitchell.
Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins.
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318
Permissions and Credits
Excerpt from “Ten Thousand Flowers in Spring, the Moon in
Autumn” by Wu Men, from
The Enlightened Heart: An Anthology
of Sacred Poetry
(New York: HarperPerennial). Translation © 1993
by Stephen Mitchell. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins.
Excerpt from “Stone and Knife” from
Come Thief.
©Jane
Hirshfield (NY: Knopf, 2011). Reprinted by kind permission of
Jane Hirshfield.
Excerpt from “Alzheimer’s” from
Come Thief
© Jane Hirsh-
field 2011. (NY: Knopf) Reprinted by kind permission of Jane
Hirshfield.
Excerpt from
Coffinman,
by Shinmon Aoki. (English translation
of
Nokanfu Nikki
.) translated by Wayne S. Yokoyama (Buddhist
Education Center, Anaheim, 2002). Translation ©2002 Buddhist
Education Center and Wayne S. Yokoyama. All rights reserved.
Reprinted by kind permission of Buddhist Education Center.
Excerpt from “To Any Young Soldier” from
Stranger to Europe:
Poems 1939–1949
by Guy Butler. A.A. Balkema, Capetown,
South Africa. © 1952 by Guy Butler.
PHOtO cReDitS:
Page xx: Photographer Unknown
Page xx: Photograph by Diana Wylie
Page xx: Photograph by Valerie Butler
Page xx: Photograph by Valerie Butler
Page xx: Photograph by Toni Perez-Palma
Page xx: Photograph by Valerie Butler
Page xx: Photograph by Valerie Butler
Page xx: Enso by Valerie Butler
Page xx: Photograph by Toni Perez-Palma
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