What must it be like, to sit at a restaurant surrounded by people celebrating the arrival of the New Year, knowing that it is almost certainly your last one?
That was the question I could not ask my father last weekend, as we sat together at a family dinner on New Year’s Eve. He’s got terminal cancer, is struggling with chronic pain, and is extremely unlikely to be alive in 12 months’ time – nor does he really want to be, given his current quality of life (or lack thereof). I couldn’t help thinking how weird it must be, to be surrounded by people who expect to be around for all of 2012, knowing that for you the coming year is most likely to bring more suffering, followed by death.
It’s not really a question you can ask someone: How does it feel to be dying? Or at least, it’s not something I know how to ask my dad, although maybe he’d be grateful for the chance to talk about it. He does talk about his pain and his struggle to manage it, about the things he misses doing, and about his desire to have me well provided for after he is gone. But the Big Picture of facing imminent death, not theoretically but for real — that’s a hard topic to broach.
When I was in my twenties, in grad school, one of my favorite professors was diagnosed with terminal esophageal cancer. He was strikingly forthright in talking about the experience. Although he had to give up teaching in mid-semester, he came back to give a farewell talk to his undergraduate Shakespeare class, and although I was not in it, I went to the lecture. Maybe studying literature, and in particular Shakespeare, had made him unusually capable of self-examination. But he talked movingly about that critical moment when Hamlet tells Horatio:
… . If it be now,
‘tis not to come; if it be not to come, it will be now;
if it be not now, yet it will come: the
readiness is all.
(Being a thorough scholar, he also invoked Edgar, in King Lear, telling his own father, “Men must endure/Their going hence, even as their coming hither;/ Ripeness is all.”) It was an incredibly powerful and helpful experience, to listen to an older adult talk openly about the prospect of death and how to face it. It must have been, since I still remember it 25 years later, and am still moved to tears by that memory.
My professor wasted away slowly, sitting in his study listening to much-loved opera and waiting for the end. He was incredibly gracious about letting us visit. As someone with no experience of death, I was deeply grateful for his generosity in sharing his experience. It used to be that death was a common feature of everyone’s lives — even young children would have exposure to dying people and deathbeds. In the 21st century, we hide death in hospitals, and we have managed to postpone it far longer than was possible before modern medicine. My professor’s openness gave me access to something that was otherwise distant and terrifying. It was his ultimate act of teaching, in my opinion
In that final lecture, he also talked about how to determine if his life had had sufficient value. The formula he came up with was elegantly simple: If more people were glad to have known him than sad, then his life had been worthwhile. It’s a lovely, manageable calculus, if you think about it. No need to have been Mother Teresa or Gandhi, or to have scaled Everest — you just need to have done more good than harm, for your life to have been worthwhile. That’s a measure that’s within reach for us all.
I don’t know how my dad will calculate the value of his life, although I am sure it matters to him to believe that it has had value. Has he been an asshole sometimes? No doubt about it. (My stepmother, who loves him and has taken amazing care of him, once said, “David, you have a shit-ass disposition” — which had everyone but him laughing hysterically.) Has he also made a significant difference through charitable giving, acts of kindness, and the example of a life well lived? Ultimately he will have to decide that for himself, but I certainly think so.
I also know I will miss him, and I wish for him a lot less pain than he’s having, and a sense of satisfaction.


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Lee, please treasure this time you have with your father. As difficult as it is watching a parent die, it's comforting to know you were there to send them off with love and dignity. May you both know peace.
winddancer1562 (anonymous profile)
January 7, 2012 at 8:11 a.m. (Suggest removal)
While we may enter this world alone many will be blessed not to be alone the last time they close their eyes. It must be a huge comfort to have someone who loves you around those last days however long or short the time may be. The Hospice community in Santa Barbara has been a very large and helpful group for the man I thought of as my father, best friend, brother, and the one I always called. It didn't matter if it was great news or tragic, his was the opinion i wanted to hear, right or wrong. He died last yr after a long struggle, his family saved me from having to pull the plug, a sacred vow made over 35 yrs ago that was planned for the next day.
The two major things I have learned about death in the USA is that it is not unusual ant to be able to find adequate pain relief even tho it is readily available and that I would rather die with my dignity intact than be kept alive yet still locked in my own mind, while people, as caring as they may be, treat me like a baby who needs changed or fed. I have a DNR package on my refrigerator, on file with my Dr. and the local Hospital, not to mention my family knowing my wishes. It can be a hard conversation to have but it is way too easy to wait too long. I have seen families torn apart over what could of and should of been a simple last will. Is a rocking chair really worth losing a sister or brother over, it is for some.
I would suggest telling or asking your father that if there is anything he wishes to discuss with you, that you would cherish hearing his thoughts or memories.
SmileySam (anonymous profile)
January 8, 2012 at 4:45 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Although some may know that they will die in 2012 (a dear relative of mine is among those), any of us may do so. Living each day as though it were all we have (which it is) -- is the way to prepare for death.
grannyfranny73 (anonymous profile)
January 9, 2012 at 9:15 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Everyday, I wake. I am utterly amazed that I managed to survive to the next......
I have signed five Death Notes, attended hundreds of funnerals, am on my Mothers Death Certificate and am waitting for my brother Death to take our Father either this year or the next; I carried a gun for 11 years on Duty and for 16 years off duty, at any time I could have kill or been killed and drive the Highways of this Nation everyday with nearly at any moment I too could be killed by another drive.
I call this the Ultimate Gamble, Living day-to-day.
dou4now (anonymous profile)
January 9, 2012 at 11:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)