Photo:Kira Perov |
There is a Persian restaurant on the ground floor of the
building where I live, which has been running ever since I came to this place. The
father was running the business, had a good looking wife and two children. The
young boy was real handsome and never wasted any opportunity to put the gift to use.
He had his BMW coupe always parked at the front of the restaurant. The
prettiest looking girls in the area could be seen in that car. I had witnessed many pretty girls hanging on
to his shoulders and smooching him in the lift and had often wondered what I
was doing at that age, burning the night candles and roaming around the medical
wards carrying the feces and urine of patients.
The father died five years back due to a heart attack. The
son had to take over the business and had to spend part of his precious time to
take care of the restaurant, which otherwise would have been lavished on the
lovely girls. I would say, he was a nice boy, was always cheerful and polite
when ever I had the reason to interact with him. After I changed the job, I
had seen less of him, and recently I saw his car parked behind the building
with a” for sale” board. I asked the watchman why he was selling the car and he
was surprised.
“Doctor, didn’t you really know that the boy died last
month?”
That was too unexpected.
“Tell me more, “I said.
It appeared that the boy had a cancer in the abdomen which
was already late when diagnosed, underwent a resection of his stomach and
intestine, had a feeding tube and a catheter for the rest of his remaining few
months. Malik , our watchman told me that the boy would still smile at him and
explain all the details of his illness. He was planning to go to Europe for another
surgery when he died.
I honestly never gave dying too much thought. Death was almost
a regular event I had witnessed in the ICU. Some patients would be brought in
and would be dead even before they had the time to think about it. I honestly
do not know what happens to them after they are intubated and placed on a
support system. Others would know they don’t have much time. Men and women
would uniformly cry out the same slogan..” moath..moath” ( death..death.) as if they were seeing it
approaching them. And on most occasions, they were right. They had seen
something….whatever had taken their lives.
Each phase of dying is different than the next, but all with
the same outcome; all from different perspectives.
All emotions can be broken down to Fear or Love.
It certainly gives me much to think about and contemplate. What would I want to say
to my family and friends; what would I need them to know before I left?
Would I be afraid? Would my belief be strong enough to see me through the
final moments of my last breaths without fear? All of which are really
great questions. And, if you think about it …so many people get taken away from
this earth without the luxury of time and contemplation of these ever so
important things.
I wish all people had the opportunity to pack up their bags,
as if they were leaving for the airport. Do the final checking...all documents...all
papers...money...handover the house to those who are not on the trip ..Giving
tips to the servants...All done in time.
The saying ‘living each day like it’s your last’ has a lot
more meaning to me these days. The small space which used to occupy my
mind with loss and regrets has no place there anymore. Should you ever
need a reminder of how great a life you have, do yourself a favor and visit a Palliative health facility filled with those with no purpose left to them,
other than counting days or go down to the Regional Cancer Centre and wander
the corridors of the Pediatric ward, looking at the faces of parents so distraught
and exhausted and the kids so sick and desperate for a day without the reality
they face.
Most of us spend the best years of life living for others.
We all have reasons. Getting married...and then living for her interests than
yours. Bringing up children and working hard to seeing them through school and
college...even to see them getting married and spend the entire life’s balance
for that sake. Make their lives easier.
Some people are just meant to live for others. There's
nothing wrong with it. After 50 years of doing so, you can't just all of a
sudden think solely about you.
I just remembered a very powerful sentence in a wonderful book, "The Gift of an Ordinary Day," by Katrina Kenison. She said, “As soon as I stop wishing for things to be different, I am met by the beauty of what is.”
I just remembered a very powerful sentence in a wonderful book, "The Gift of an Ordinary Day," by Katrina Kenison. She said, “As soon as I stop wishing for things to be different, I am met by the beauty of what is.”
So isn’t it true that we spend much time wishing for
things to be different?
How hard it is to stop wishing for things to be different?
What if we were able to say, “This is what I have to deal with right now? This
is what is happening. Let me stay right here and pay attention. It’s OK if I
feel angry, embarrassed, impatient, bewildered, disappointed, and afraid."
Imagine just staying in that feeling and taking responsibility for it.
We want to retaliate, blame, find an answer, sweep the
moment away and forget. “The beauty of what is” might not actually be
beautiful, but when I can stay with what is and accept it, something beautiful
happens.
Truly, the art of dying teaches us the art of living.
And if we were to spend some time in the reality that we will all one day leave this planet; either
slowly with time to prepare or quickly without that luxury, the truth is we
would be much better people. We would live as we were meant to …caring
about the important things like love, compassion and happiness. We would
prepare, we would communicate and we would die with a lot less regret and those
left behind us, would be better equipped to let us go.
Jim Emerson blog |