kp2171
Jul 28, 2006, 07:43 AM
Not a question, but a perspective I had not thought about.
I attended the wake of a friend's mother yesterday. She had terminal cancer, fought the fight, and eventually lost. We found out about her passing on the way to my wife's aunt's funeral, another cancer victim.
At the wake, her daughter was upset, but obviously glad her mother was no longer suffering. The cancer had spread to the lungs, and her mother was in pain.
What was bothering the daughter was that her mother was lying to the hospice workers about the pain. The daughter could see through her mother, and was clearly disturbed that her last few days were so hard.
My wife then told her something which I had never considered. That the mother was perhaps not acting irrationally. That she chose to endure the pain those last few days in order to be clear and mentally present those last few days of her life.
I am in no way saying pain management should be pushed aside, especially when the body is ravaged in such a brutal way.
But when the daughter heard this you could see it took away a burden. She knew that's exactly what her mother was doing, but she didn't understand it at the time. Her mother was in pain but chose to experience her last hours fully aware and present.
Again, I know a person shouldn't suffer needlessly, and I'm all for the reasonable management of pain... but I guess I'm posting this because I also had not thought about that perspective, and I think its one worth keeping in mind. I too would have worried that the person I loved was suffering needlessly, when they actually might be of sound mind and deliberate choice.
In this case, it explained how a strong woman stood toe to toe with a disease that cut down her body but never her dignity or her will.
I attended the wake of a friend's mother yesterday. She had terminal cancer, fought the fight, and eventually lost. We found out about her passing on the way to my wife's aunt's funeral, another cancer victim.
At the wake, her daughter was upset, but obviously glad her mother was no longer suffering. The cancer had spread to the lungs, and her mother was in pain.
What was bothering the daughter was that her mother was lying to the hospice workers about the pain. The daughter could see through her mother, and was clearly disturbed that her last few days were so hard.
My wife then told her something which I had never considered. That the mother was perhaps not acting irrationally. That she chose to endure the pain those last few days in order to be clear and mentally present those last few days of her life.
I am in no way saying pain management should be pushed aside, especially when the body is ravaged in such a brutal way.
But when the daughter heard this you could see it took away a burden. She knew that's exactly what her mother was doing, but she didn't understand it at the time. Her mother was in pain but chose to experience her last hours fully aware and present.
Again, I know a person shouldn't suffer needlessly, and I'm all for the reasonable management of pain... but I guess I'm posting this because I also had not thought about that perspective, and I think its one worth keeping in mind. I too would have worried that the person I loved was suffering needlessly, when they actually might be of sound mind and deliberate choice.
In this case, it explained how a strong woman stood toe to toe with a disease that cut down her body but never her dignity or her will.