This Is The End, My
Friend
I’m a Boomer, born just
late enough (by days) to avoid the draft in the Vietnam War. I was living in
the US at the time, and they were drafting resident aliens and people with
green cards first. My older brother actually got his draft lottery number in
the mail, one that was just high enough to miss the cut-off when Nixon stopped
calling up troops.
The point of this is, I
was exposed to thoughts of possible mortality earlier than most Canadians. In
fact, by growing up in the US, I was exposed to the concept of mass death very
early - we had nuclear attack drills regularly at my elementary school where we
were told to “duck and cover” under our desks, or along the concrete walls.
There was a life-size fallout shelter erected in the Grand Union parking lot to
show people what surviving the coming war with the Russians would be like.
It was damp in there,
smelled of pee, and was littered with condoms. We were told that we’d play
Monopoly and Scrabble all day long, and eat Saltines and sardines. This
frightened me more than the thought of thermonuclear war, as I hated all these
things. Somehow I knew no one was going to go live in a sewer pipe in the back
yard for 6 months just to survive into a wasted world with a whole lot of no future.
I don’t think about
mortality a lot, but when I do, I’m comfortable with it. I’ve lived hard and
long in my three score years, and I could fill at least a couple of volumes of
memoirs (of which these essays are the first draft). I’ve done most of the
things I want to do in life except flying first class on an Airbus A-380 to
Europe and taking the Queen Mary 2 back, and there’s time for that if I save my
nickels.
Death is going to be a
non-event when it comes. If our parents’ generation is the guide, we will spend
the last 3 or 4 years in a state of suspended animation, on the verge of death
but held back by medical advances. However, there is a chance that our
attitudes to death will have changed fundamentally by the time my time comes,
and I will be able to choreograph my own exit.
I, like 70% of the
Canadian population, support physician-assisted suicide. We rely on doctors to
ease us into this world nowadays, and, since the Supreme Court decision, we'll now be able to let them ease us out. Better yet, we
should have a profession for it, the way midwives supervise births. A sort of
doula of death is needed, someone with intimate knowledge of the stages of
death, and how to forestall or hasten it.
My experience with the
death of my parents recently is that most doctors know nothing about death.
They are trained to prolong life by any means, and that’s what they
instinctively do. When presented with the inevitable, most panic and order more
and more invasive therapies. We finally found a Palliative Care doctor for my
mother, and her care instantly changed from brutal to kindly, from painful and
invasive to comforting and calming. She was given all the morphine she wanted,
with none of the standard physicians’ fear of dependency. Her wish to stay at
home was granted, and her care brought to her, instead of the other way around.
It is clear we are going
to have train more palliative care doctors, or at least nurse-practitioners or
the death doulas mentioned earlier. There are a lot of us Boomers out here,
we’re used to the best, and we’re going to be dying like flies in about 30
years time. Let’s hope as a society we’ve become better at managing it by then
than we are now.
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