- The one about hospice.
- The one about the paradox of death.
- The one about hospice in jail.
- The one about palliative care.
Can you tell that death is on my mind? It has been, ever since my mother was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer. I think about her death, which was as "good" a death as they come - at home, with two of her three children at her side (the third would have been there but for the fact that he'd had a baby 14 hours earlier).
I started a post about hospice a long time ago, mostly because I'd come across a paragraph about hospice workers in a comic novel called A Dirty Job, a paragraph that kind of flattened me:
"He turned to see a big, thirtyish woman in scrubs: another hospice worker - another of the amazing women that Charlie had seen in the homes of the dying, helping to deliver them into the next world with as much comfort and dignity and even joy as they could gather - benevolent Valkyries, midwives of the final light, they were - and as Charlie watched them at work, he saw that rather than become detached from, or callous to their job, they because involved with every patient and every family. They were present. He'd seen them grieve with a hundred different families, taking part in an intensity of emotion that most people would feel only a few times in their lives."
Benevolent Valkyries indeed.
Let me just say this: hospice is a good thing, a very good thing. It gives grace to death.
Yes. I'm trying to work end of life care into my job search, at the administrative level. And you've prompted me to dust off a book that is at the bottom of my night stand, Final Acts, so I can read it next.
ReplyDeleteDusty, indeed. It's Last Acts, by Casarett.
ReplyDeleteAmen. I agree. Yes. All that stuff.
ReplyDeleteT.
I completely agree. My grandmother's last weeks were under hospice care, and it allowed her to have her end happen where she wanted and without the medical interventions that would not have saved her but would have made her less happy.
ReplyDelete(I loved that book, by the way. I keep thinking I should read another of his books. I think he wrote something more recently with the shopgirl from ADJ as the lead.)
I would love to read more about your thoughts and experience with all four.
ReplyDeleteIt is an amazing thing.
ReplyDeleteHospice is, perhaps, the best way that we know, in our society. I wonder on other societies though. Just curious. We scramble against death so readily, but pain more so. What an incredibly difficult thing to balance living and dying, respect and humanity. Those involved in hospice have a calmness of spirit that I lack. Perhaps it comes? They are some special kind of people.
ReplyDeletemuch love to you, M.
these things don't disappear but become a part of us, the losing of people and the trying to understand it all.
xo
erin
I somehow got it into my head during college that I wanted to volunteer at a hospice, but I never got up the nerve to actually do it. I've always been impressed with the stories I've heard about the care they give, though.
ReplyDeleteoh my goodness, hospice in jail. Those Valkyries must be an even more special breed, if that's possible.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad hospice helped you and your family.
big hugs to you
ReplyDeleteI, too, wish I had the inner peace that all hospice people radiate. But since I don't, I will just remain in awe of everything they do. And hospice in jail would be awesome.
ReplyDeleteOh, yes.
ReplyDeletehospice was the only graceful thing in my father's death
ReplyDeleteIt's curious, isn't it? How the hospice nurses can be so loving to so many of the doomed? I wonder how they do that.
ReplyDeleteEvery Christmas I donate the money that I would have spent on my Dad's holiday gift to Hospice. They are Saints.
ReplyDeleteHaving had the honour to be with 2 of my grandparents as they passed on, one in a hospital and one in hospice I can totally agree with this. The people in the hospice were fabulous and kind and thoughtful. Unlike in the hospital *sigh*
ReplyDeleteI have a high-school friend who was an ICU nurse and from there found his calling in palliative care. I won't link, because his blog (now completed) is pretty intense, but it certainly shocked me into understanding how desperately we need hospice at home to become the standard.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely. I remember the Phila Inquirer had a series on a hospice nurse some time ago. It was fascinating, and showed how end-of-life care is so much more than what happens at the final moments. It's about pain-relief, family therapy, and on and on. Those workers have my utmost respect and admiration.
ReplyDeleteWell, i wanted to volunteer at a hospice, but I never got up the nerve to actually do it. I've always been impressed with the stories I've heard about the care they give, though, anyway thanx for posting.
ReplyDeleteI work hospice and that paragraph just left me with tears sliding down my face.... what a beautiful way to say it.
ReplyDeleteI am sorry for your loss. I am glad that you were able to be with her and that they helped you, your mother and your family.