The Five Wishes - A Gift of Love
I have the wish to live a long and healthy life that ends in as gentle and calm way as possible. I'm talking about ending life as I know it in what I and others would call ‘a good death'. Of course there are things out of our control due to circumstance, fate, and a force greater than us. But there are things we do have power over and one of those is to provide directions in writing about what we do and do not want our last months, weeks, days and hours to be like when it is our turn to die.
Through my experience with Ray I know I do have power in the preparation for my death. I have the opportunity now to figure out all the details that are likely to make my death rough or gentle so that things do not happen in a random manner, with fights, struggles, guesses at what might be the best for me. By filling out an advanced directive (I chose the 5 Wishes format) I put words down so the guessing will be reduced to the minimum.
Since Ray’s near perfect end-of-life experience I talk more willingly about death and more importantly I no longer fear my death. His death was an amazingly calm experience in great part to the way he answered the Five Wishes that were presented to him years before he received his terminal diagnosis. By filling out the booklet and sharing it with family members and my doctor, there should be no confusion or guessing about how I want my last days to play out.
It’s the best gift I can give those who will want to be with me as I leave. I don’t know for sure what’s ahead of me after this life but I can take responsibility to make sure I have the kind of death of I want. Choices ranging from wanting flowers in the room or not wanting flowers in the room to not wanting to die at home or requesting that folks do everything possible so that I can die at home; and such things large and small are all covered in the 5 Wishes questions. We answer the questions within the following categories: 1. My wish for what person do I want to make health care decisions for me when I can’t make then for myself. 2) My Wish for the kind of medical treatment I want or don’t want. 3) My Wish for how comfortable I want to be. 4) My Wish for how do I want people to treat me? 5) My Wish for what I want my loved ones to know.
Filling out and distributing the 5 Wishes to key players in my life is greatest gift I can give my friends, my loved ones and my doctors and anyone who is likely to be close by when my health takes a turn and I am close to death. Giving folks a document providing a roadmap of my requests demonstrates that I have thought through all the tough questions about how I want to be treated and have offered it in black and white for all to see.
I leave a positive legacy representing the respect I have for my own life, the respect I have for my loved ones and those helping me on perhaps the most important journey I will ever make, the path from here to there.
Get your free copy of the 5 Wishes by going to www.hospicepartnerssc.org and click the link to HPSC5wishes. :fivewishes@agingwithdignity.org
Since Ray’s near perfect end-of-life experience I talk more willingly about death and more importantly I no longer fear my death. His death was an amazingly calm experience in great part to the way he answered the Five Wishes that were presented to him years before he received his terminal diagnosis. By filling out the booklet and sharing it with family members and my doctor, there should be no confusion or guessing about how I want my last days to play out.
It’s the best gift I can give those who will want to be with me as I leave. I don’t know for sure what’s ahead of me after this life but I can take responsibility to make sure I have the kind of death of I want. Choices ranging from wanting flowers in the room or not wanting flowers in the room to not wanting to die at home or requesting that folks do everything possible so that I can die at home; and such things large and small are all covered in the 5 Wishes questions. We answer the questions within the following categories: 1. My wish for what person do I want to make health care decisions for me when I can’t make then for myself. 2) My Wish for the kind of medical treatment I want or don’t want. 3) My Wish for how comfortable I want to be. 4) My Wish for how do I want people to treat me? 5) My Wish for what I want my loved ones to know.
Filling out and distributing the 5 Wishes to key players in my life is greatest gift I can give my friends, my loved ones and my doctors and anyone who is likely to be close by when my health takes a turn and I am close to death. Giving folks a document providing a roadmap of my requests demonstrates that I have thought through all the tough questions about how I want to be treated and have offered it in black and white for all to see.
I leave a positive legacy representing the respect I have for my own life, the respect I have for my loved ones and those helping me on perhaps the most important journey I will ever make, the path from here to there.
Get your free copy of the 5 Wishes by going to www.hospicepartnerssc.org and click the link to HPSC5wishes. :fivewishes@agingwithdignity.org