This post originally appeared in Overland, and then on Role/Reboot and is republished here with full permission.
Nine months ago my mum asked me to buy an axe and chop her head off. I joked with her. Told her it would be a messy way to go.
She was lying in a palliative care ward, dying of cancer. Chopping her head off might have been messy, but at least it would have been quick.
Death isn’t like birth. It doesn’t happen over a couple of days. And there’s no one standing by ready to assist if it looks like it’s going to go longer. Dying takes time.
Before I watched my mum die, I’d always believed so outspokenly in euthanasia. I was adamant that I would help my loved ones find a peaceful end if I were ever in that position. I remember conversations when mum and I joked about pushing her wheelchair off a cliff if she made it to 100. But it’s just not that simple. It’s not a question of legality. Or morality. It’s a question of how selfish you are.
Even if I’d been able to slip mum a magic tablet to help her die painlessly in her sleep, would I have done it? I’m no longer sure. The process of dying isn’t for the patient; it’s for their loved ones. I wasn’t ready for her to die. I needed it to take time. Over those weeks, I needed to process how I was going to feel. I had to prepare myself for her death, and I did it by sitting by her bed day and night, watching her struggle to breathe, refusing to eat, and growing angrier and more distant. It was only after watching her suffer, that I was fully ready for her to go.
It’s selfish. I know that. I’ve struggled with that since she died. It surprised me to learn how selfish I was, even though I knew the pain she was in. It shocked me to realize how willing I was to compromise her quality of life, just so she could stick around for a bit longer. I’ve excused my selfishness by believing that I wouldn’t be like that with just anyone. I needed my mother. I still do. I hope I would not be so selfish with my children or my partner. I hope I could recognize their pain and let them go.
Top Comments
My mum has been sick with MS for a long time, watching everything that she was as a person slowly fade away is heartbreaking. My dad is getting older and now has heart problems. I have been prepared for my mother's death for some time but seeing my dad, who has alway been a giant become old and frail shook me to the core. It sounds terrible but part of me hopes that my mum goes first. I don't want to be forced to put her in a nursing home. Plus my dad has worked every day of his life since he was 15 and is now my mother's full time carer it would be nice for him to be able to enjoy a few years of his retirement while he's still physically and mentally able to. Sometimes I get so angry that I have all these people (my daughter, my parents, other family etc) leaning on me, needing me to stay strong. Who do I lean on? I totally understand the relif that death can bring for the famillies left behind after a prolonged illness. Once you know you loved ones can't feel anymore pain then you are free from worrying about them, from being afraid every time the phone rings late at night that the thing you have dreaded for so long has finally happened.
I fully support euthanasia. When my dear dad was in the last stages of his death by cancer and we were all sitting around his bed listening to his heavy death rattle, I remember thinking 'just die! Please, slip away now'. It seemed to take so long. And I thought about whether this wish for him to die was for his sake or for mine. Was I just trying to avoid a painful experience, or was it genuine selfless benificence? Thinking back though, dad knew it would come. There was a moment about a month before he died when he got his good friends to come to him, and without further ado, said "Well, I'm fucked. I'm facing the end, and I want you to know that". The cancer was terminal, he was riddled with it, and at that stage he said he could actually feel the tumors taking over his body. He was in so much pain. He should have had an out then. Why should people be forced to endure such pain when they are definitely and unequivocally just waiting for their imminent demise? I was lucky I had 18 months to say goodbye, but actually I found I never really said goodbye or was ready until it happened. It's just a surreal nightmare until it actually happens, but family need to get over their own emotions and think of the person going through it. My opinion is, if you wouldn't let a dog suffer like that, why would we do it to our loved ones?