~ STRANGE THINGS HAPPEN IN THIS WORLD ~

Taking Life's Final Exit
By Valerie Reitman Times Staff Writer
PHILADELPHIA My brother took more trains, planes and
automobiles in the last week of his life than he had taken in months, perhaps
years. Those journeys were all the more surprising because they occurred in an
intensive-care unit at the end of his three-year battle with bone marrow cancer.
Bedridden after being rushed to the hospital for what would be the final eight
days of his life, Kenny casually mentioned that he was visiting Detroit. It was
a rather odd place for him to be traveling even if only in his imagination
because the hospital was near home in suburban Philadelphia and he didn't have
any ties to the Motor City.
But it was near a border, a border he seemed intent on crossing, be it real or
metaphoric.
"How far is it to Canada?" he wanted to know. "Where's the map?"
Though very weak, Kenny, 45, intermittently recognized and chatted lucidly with
family gathered by his bedside. But he would drop in news of his varied travels:
He had gone skiing one afternoon in Australia, he told us, stopped by North
Carolina another day, and more than once had been "stuck in passport control."
At first, our family dismissed these journeys as confusion; we would laugh
through our tears about the various places and modes of transport he had been
taking. It must be the painkillers, we thought. Or maybe hypoxia, the oxygen
deprivation in the blood that often contributes to delirium in sick people. Or
that the cancer now was destroying his mind, just as it had racked his body.
But then our cousin Lynne mentioned that her parents had done a lot of similar
traveling in the last days of their cancer battles. Uncle Larry (Lynne's father)
had insisted that his passport and fanny pack be kept by his bedside; he was
intent on keeping an imaginary 3 p.m. appointment with the emperor of Japan,
where I was living then and where he had hoped to visit. He too had asked for a
map of Japan. Aunt Lois, who had died four years before, had talked about
needing to catch a train, asking Lynne to buy her a ticket.
There seemed to be a pattern. A nearby bookstore turned up a 1992 title that
offered some clues: "Final Gifts: Understanding the Special Awareness, Needs and
Communications of the Dying."
Its chapter titles were uncanny: "Where's the Map?" and "I'm Getting Ready To
Leave." Authors Patricia Kelley and Maggie Callanan, longtime Washington,
D.C.-area hospice nurses, had heard similar talk so often from their dying
patients conveying this sense of moving from one place to another, of being in
transition that they concluded it must be a special language the dying have to
communicate what is happening to them.
"It would be easy to say it's just coincidence, but when you see it over and
over, there has to be something there," Kelley said in a telephone interview. "I
do think people experience something we can't describe."
The authors termed the phenomenon "nearing death awareness" a state they think
reveals what dying might be like and what a person needs to die peacefully.
It has some similarities with the more widely known near-death experiences
reported by some patients who are resuscitated on operating tables or at the
scenes of accidents. They report seeing a bright light at the end of a tunnel,
with people and events of their lives flashing as if in a kaleidoscope.
In contrast, however, those dying slowly often talk of preparing for a trip or
of trying to finish something, Kelley and Callanan found, perhaps using language
pertaining to their professions or hobbies. One dying man who liked to sail, for
instance, talked about the ebbing of the tides; a watchmaker mentioned that the
clock was not ticking fast enough; a carpenter described details of completing
an imaginary house.
The observations built on an earlier four-year study by physicians Karlis Osis
and Erlendur Haraldsson, in which hundreds of physicians and nurses observed
50,000 dying patients from India and the U.S. In both cultures, patients
commonly reported deathbed visions of movement toward something and of being
greeted by deceased loved ones who were helping them to "cross over" in their
last moments.
Several healthcare workers and bereaved families interviewed for this article
also witnessed similar phenomena. A few days before Jennifer Lee Foster, 26, of
Millbrook, N.Y., died of leukemia, she told her relatives she had seen a young
neighborhood boy who had been killed years earlier in an auto accident. The boy
said, " 'How you doing, Jen? I was waiting to say hi to you,' " recalls her
mother, Jean DiMarco, of Millbrook.
Kathy Pollard, educational director at Hospice of the Valley in Phoenix, said
that she had seen dying patients countless times shaking their heads "yes" or
"no" and making motions with their hands as they talk with deceased people.
Loved ones shouldn't argue, but simply affirm what the person is saying or
inquire about what they're seeing or doing, Pollard says. One sweet old lady put
her hand up and touched Pollard's cheek one day, and said, "Oh, my dear isn't
the train we're on beautiful?"
"Are you on a train?" Pollard asked.
"Yes, I am," the woman replied.
"Oh, where are you going?" Pollard asked.
The old woman's eyes closed. "I'm on the way to South Dakota."
"And what will happen when you get there?" Pollard replied.
"Well, my dear," the old lady answered, "then the journey will be over."
Just before Pollard's own father died two years ago after a stroke and a fall in
a nursing home, he kept saying, "Ma, Ma, open the door." Pollard leaned in close
and whispered, "You can open the door, Dad."
Says Pollard, "We believe the patient is on the journey and they are going to
make the decision when the train stops or when to open the door [and die]. We
reassure the patient that he or she's going to be OK, and say things like, 'Dad,
you've been a great father I'll miss you like crazy, but you're going to be
OK.' "
As Kenny did, the dying frequently mention being "stuck" or "held up" which
Kelley and Callanan say may indicate something is keeping them from letting go
such as concern about how a spouse or children will cope or the need to take
care of something undone or to see a loved one. A young man dying of AIDS (news
- web sites) told Kelley about his father being "in the way." They had long been
estranged, and the young man was hoping (for naught) that his dad might visit.
The phenomenon isn't universal. Some are too sick; others can't talk. Moreover,
a person's behavior in death will typically be much like it was in life a very
private person isn't likely to become talkative on his deathbed. And not
everyone who speaks of wanting to go home or take a journey is talking about
death.
An elderly woman in her 80s pleaded with Sara Perry, a social worker at
Montgomery Hospice inpatient program in Maryland, to take her home. Perry told
her soothingly that "sometimes when people are as sick as you and they talk
about going home, they are really talking about going to heaven." The woman shot
back, "Listen, honey, I'm talking about going home to my apartment."
Why dying people speak of taking journeys is anyone's guess. Drugs don't seem to
play much of a role, hospice workers say, because the phenomenon occurs both in
those who are taking painkillers and those who aren't. If anything, they say,
the more drugs one takes, the less likely any conversations.
Others speculate that the dying may be experiencing visions similar to those in
a dream. "The mind has its own set of analgesics," said sociologist Robert
Fulton, a University of Minnesota professor emeritus and a pioneer in the study
of death and bereavement in the 1960s. "The mind is well capable of drugging
itself. In a dream, there might be the euphoria of meeting a dead friend and
having a conversation
. The brain is kind of cleaning itself up, like a computer
downloading."
The dreams are reinforced by images of immortality, and of heaven and hell or
reincarnation, embraced throughout history as well as in modern life. Kelley
speculates that the dying recognize "that they're going from one world to
another one" or the feeling that they're "going somewhere."
Perhaps the travels are due to a "freeing up" of the spirit once the dying
person has accepted that death is imminent, said Dr. William Lamers, who set up
the second hospice in the U.S., in Marin County in the 1970s. This brings about
a phenomenon he has witnessed again and again: The dying person, if in a
comfortable setting and in little pain, is at peace with his or her condition
and takes interest in the well-being of the survivors, who often aren't nearly
as comfortable with the imminent death.
That can be particularly true with dying children, says Betty Ferrell, a nurse
and research scientist at City of Hope National Medical Center in Duarte, who
has worked with the dying for 25 years. The child might say that angels came to
visit and beckoned him to come. But rather than finding it comforting that the
child isn't afraid, parents get upset, and say, " 'Oh no, you're staying right
here with me,' " Ferrell says. (Ferrell directs a new national program to help
nurses better understand and care for dying patients, using "Final Gifts" as a
text.)
Then there are those who believe that maybe just maybe the dying really are
going on journeys or being visited by their deceased loved ones. Author-hospice
nurse Callanan sees no harm, and maybe some consolation, in such credence.
For my family, just knowing that so many others had taken such "journeys" on
their deathbeds gave us comfort, as we passed around "Final Gifts" during long
hours at the hospital. We came to believe that Kenny had reconciled himself to
dying. A strapping 6-foot-3 electrical engineer who hadn't taken a sick day in
more than 20 years at the steel mill he helped run, Kenny had vowed that he had
"no doubt he'd beat this thing," even though multiple myeloma is virtually
incurable and most patients live three to five years at most.
The most promising treatment a stem-cell transplant followed by a bone marrow
transplant from our brother Bob, an exact match didn't work, and our hopes for
a long remission faded. Drug after drug failed, and tumors on his spine
threatened paralysis. A month before his death, his local oncologist handing
his wife, Cyndie, and son, Zach, a box of tissues as he matter-of-factly
delivered the news advised that the most humane thing would be to stop
treatment.
Still, Kenny wouldn't give up and asked his main oncologist in Philadelphia to
try something else, telling him that he knew he was going to die eventually, but
intended to live a few more years rather than a few more weeks. The doctor
complied with another experimental drug. Kenny grew weaker, however, until he
could barely walk and couldn't climb the stairs to bed.
Once settled into the ICU with oxygen, he was more comfortable and began to
accept the reality. "It seems like my body's telling me something
. Everything
seems to be shutting down."
The death-related imagery soon started popping up, what Callanan termed
"previews of coming attractions." Kenny thought he had seen towels labeled
"hospice" as he came into the hospital. One day, he told his teenage children
there were buzzards in the hospital room corner. When they told him that wasn't
true, he replied calmly, "It's only natural," indicating to us that he didn't
find this image of death at all macabre.
He mentioned being visited by "John," but couldn't tell us who John was except
to deny it was anyone we suggested. Only weeks after his funeral did we figure
out that he probably meant our brother Chris' father-in-law, whom he didn't know
well, but whose wake he had attended months earlier.
Three nights before he died, he told daughter Jessica, 16, to "get my shoes,
Jess. We need to get on the boat." Did he mean the small catamaran he sometimes
sailed with our father, we asked. "No, it's a big boat," he retorted, seeming
indignant that we couldn't see what he could. "Where's my green duffel?" he
said. "I need to pack."
When a nurse popped in later, he inquired in earnest, "Do we change buses here?"
I stayed with him through that night, and he asked out of the blue, "Is the
viewing today?" Do you want a viewing, I asked, knowing how much he hated them
and preferred cremation. "Well, you don't know whether to have one or not," he
replied. "I guess you could have one and I don't have to be there."
I reread aloud to him the beautiful letters Zach, Louise and Jess had written,
thanking him for being such a wonderful father and telling him how much they
loved him. More than likely, it was concern for them that was keeping him from
letting go.
"Losing you is going to be really hard, but you need to stop suffering
."
Jessica wrote. "And don't feel bad that you're going to be leaving us, OK? I
love you so much, Daddy. I will miss you so much. You will always live on in
spirit. Goodbye, Daddy. Your daughter forever with love, Jessica." And she drew
five stick figures, with a caption, "We will always be a happy family."
He started to cry. "Oh Val, what am I going to do?" But a half-minute later, it
was as if, mercifully, he was somewhere well beyond the gravity of it all. He
stopped crying and asked quizzically, "Val, where are we?"
Is there anything he wanted me to tell his wife and kids for him, I asked, a
redundant question because he had often told them how much he loved them.
"No," he replied, "I'll write on the plane.