A grandfather-father-husband-salesman-cook-gardener-hiker-gentleman, adored by many, is struck down by cancer. His disease is particularly horrible, spreading quickly though his body causing damage not only to bone and organ, but to sinew and nerve. He suffers terrible pain for weeks, relieved poorly with inadequate doses of inferior medications, thrashing in misery witnessed by his kin, always at the bedside, ages seven to seventy. Finally, uncomfortable and agitated until the end, he dies. Does his pain continue after death?
Pain that is not relieved in a person’s life continues after they are gone, held as a sordid memory by loved ones. Just as we retain treasured thoughts of joy, wisdom and warmth, we preserve images of pain. Unrequited suffering contaminates memory, preventing healing, healthy grieving and closure. This pain in turn flows across our communities, touching many who may never have met the patient.
This does not have to be somatic discomfort to be treated with pain medication. Shortness of breath, seizures, nausea, wounds and bleeding cast intense images that last more than one lifetime. Uncontrolled anxiety or fear may contaminate a family and corrupt its fiber, as can loss of spiritual path, loneliness, or guilt. Failure to settle past wrongs or mixed intentions results in a loss of opportunity, a psychic wound that will never heal.
A poorly managed end-of-life experience can transform families for generations. I recently heard of a young man who suffered a miserable protracted death from cancer. This resulted in his wife becoming chronically depressed and isolated from her family. She committed suicide, leaving their son a life as an alcoholic and drug addict. The ripples from that one cancer spread out and, through the network of that family, caused pain for many more.
When we think of end-of-life planning, we focus on those immediate moments for the patient and family, as well we should. The opportunity to live one’s life well, even at its end, should not be denied, and must be the first goal of palliative medicine and hospice. However, we cannot overstate the need and potential to protect and even nourish future generations by treating pain of all types in patients with terminal illness, and in families sharing that passage.
There is pain after death, and I suspect it is the cause of much waste, anger and tragedy in our society. We must strive to prevent that suffering. Good things are possible, loved ones can be together, memories shared, and solid foundations laid. Patients, families, doctors and caregivers must protect and treasure even this difficult time of a person’s life, because as one life ends, others are beginning.
As published in Sunrise Rounds.
By using this blog, you agree to these terms, which may change. This blog is for personal educational use only. Children under the age of 13 may not use this blog. Blog user agrees not to rely on this blog and releases Blogger from any damages arising from its use. This blog is compliant with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Please report infringements to jimsal@sunriserounds.com.
jcs
if this is the best that "god" could do for these people, why call the evil s.o.b. god? this is yet another example that if there is a god, what good is he or she?
The problem of good and evil has been wrestled with in every age. The fact that for believers, God is all-good, all-loving, all-knowing and all-powerful does not mean that evil has no place in the world. The key is that in God's tremendous love, we are granted the free will to choose good or evil. God couldn't be said to love us if we were only able to worship God. God is not the author of evil. Evil is the consequence of a disordered world (where evil is chosen). Also, obviously, much good can come from evil. Otherwise, evil would spread unchecked, and this show would have ended a long time ago. Finally, to ask "What good is God?" implies that God should somehow serve humanity, which is a complete inversion of what believers hold to be the truth of the human-divine relationship. For believers, the question is "What good are we?" The answer is "We are as good as our good desires and actions."
an open mind is why i'm an atheist, i had to open my mind that these were all fairytales on my own. Examples would be insemination by a ghost, a flying jesus and a talking snake. I had to think that what i was being told didn't add up. if i was close minded i would likely go along with the 96% of the US population that believes...
jcs
you have to agree that medical science will save or lengthen the lives of people with cancer, not praying... correct? i have come across very educated people such as yourself and always wondered how they can comprehend the most complicated teachings that i couldn't, yet they believed in god. then i realized comprehension and thinking for yourself are two completely different functions of the brain. if anyone believes god is all powerful, jump off a skyscraper and pray to live....
Religion, spirituality, philosophy .... Does it really matter what a person calls their motivation to "Do this" and "Avoid that"? I think what matters is whether or not a person has integrity and promotes a civilization of love rather than a culture of death. The visceral, hate-filled and mocking responses are all out of proportion to a simple "god bless u". Published just yesterday: Dr Eben Alexander, a Harvard-educated neurosurgeon, fell into a coma for seven days in 2008 after contracting meningitis. During his illness Dr Alexander says that the part of his brain which controls human thought and emotion "shut down" and that he then experienced "something so profound that it gave me a scientific reason to believe in consciousness after death."
jcs
Nice to meet you. I see that you've felt the need to comment on this person's honest heartfelt words of compassion. I also see that you've decided to inject your own belief into the mix. Good for you. Just because you happen to not need any form of faith or comfort doesn't mean that others don't. Words of well wishes to others in times of hurt are a sign of humanity. Whether borne from a divine being or something as yet understood it ties us all together. I'm glad you have accepted your beliefs as your own. You must be a strong and knowledgeable person to have figured out such complicated matters as that of the nature of existence. Question. Does figuring out things like that always turn people in pompous jerks?
Just out in the news - experienced and written by a Neurosurgeon Doctor: http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/10/07/proof-of-heaven-a-doctor-s-experience-with-the-afterlife.html Read it carefully, all (4) pages. Then, take what you read and decipher it however you want; from a science perspective, a doctors perspective, a religious perspective or from a skeptical perspective... The facts as he outlines in his story can't be refuted when you break everything down, more so when medical equipment documented his body/brain functions (fact) and he was pretty much "brain dead" with almost no chance of coming back. No one forces anyone to believe in a certain book, teachings and/or to take a certain path - as being human allows each one of us to have an open mind and we chose our paths. Believers of this or that religion, read that above story with AN OPEN MIND. As for pain after death - the only pain after death is felt by those loved ones who lost someone due to premature death (sickness, accident, murder etc) and/or death due to aging (natural causes etc). The one who passes no longer is in pain as they are set free from their body and mind (which is merely a capsule for the soul). The soul moves onward, it's set free from the body and pain is no more. Interpret as you will....
http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2010/12/19/a-holiday-message-from-ricky-gervais-why-im-an-atheist/
The people who lose loved ones prematurely or tragically need to reconcile with the event and reach closure (hopefully rapidly as possible) and move on with their lives. This is not easy for many people, may take a long time, but they need to process through the steps of grief, anger, denial, acceptance and the others. I may sound cold, but dwelling on a tragic event will not make it better or make it go away. The only way is to understand what happen, accept it and move your life in the new direction. Stagnation in a bad situation leads to further demoralization.
Freedom of conscience means giving the other guy the same respect you'd want for yourself. Many people deeply believe in their faith. If they aren't trying to fly a 767 into a skyscraper (and we all know the militant types never, ever condemn non-Christian believers), what people believe or why they believe or how they believe is none of your business. Bringing up this on a blog post about life after death, and about people who just to overcome their grief with the death of their loved ones, is tacky, tasteless, and inhuman.
Why do people (other than myself) say god bless you when someones sneezes? why... because some religious figure decided it was a good idea. when you sneeze, it should be no different than when you expel any fluid or noise such as a cough, burp, or a fart from your body. the person that did it should say excuse me. This is just another example of an atheist being looked at like a bad person because they don't say god bless you when YOU sneeze.