Showing posts with label death/dying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death/dying. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Perfectly Unfinished

 We all live unfinished lives.   With the exception of an older man I know who had recently updated his will, paid all his bills on a certain day and went out for a run, came back feeling “tired” and lay down and never got up again…all of leave a lot of things undone.  A client of mine’s father was a hoarder and when went to a nursing home her siblings and her had to hire a squad of workers with a truck to spend two weeks basically excavating the house and taking everything to the dumb.  (A task made harder by the fact that there were a few valuable objects and documents mixed into the mess.)   My best friends mother, mad after her husbands Aunt died leaving them excuators of her estate in another state (without asking) and the years it took them to handle everything, was determined to not leave this sort of burden to her kids.   Unfortunately, her husband who declined into dementia did not have the capacity to do the same.  So for years after his death she sorted boxes and got rid of things and organized and gave things away.   And yet after her death it took her daughter a good six months to separate out the items for family members and get them to them, have Salvation army take other things, and yes sort….the boxes and boxes of photos before putting the Condo on the market, and there will still be paperwork for another year.  I think somewhere between the man who died at the end of bill day and the hoarder, there is a balance that represents living but being thoughtful of those who will clean up behind us.  (I have to say all three of these people died as they lived.)

There are no finished lives.   A friend of mine is dying in a hospital right now. (post note she died 10/26/21).  She is essentially without family.  There will be no one to clear the stuff out of her apartment.  The landlord will be left to get a squad to haul everything out, and that is with a month unpaid rent as well.  She also had established no medical power of attorney which made things very difficult after she got in the hospital.  Those she was most close to were not allowed updates on her medical status and had to beg the doctors to hear the relevant information we had about her health condition.  The law defaults to next of kin, meaning the hospital found and called a sister she had not spoken to in years and asked her to make final decisions about medical care for my friend.   Reader, if you don’t have a medical power attorney established, stop pretending you will never die and get the paper work done!  We are all after all in a pandemic.

There are no perfect lives.   A client of mine has struggled for years with a sort of perfectionism that keeps her stuck.  Afraid to choose anything for fear of making a wrong choice, or passing up a right choice she remains firmly affixed to the fence unable to make choices that would move her forward.  She is a potter and recently as we worked on the perfectionism in the rest of her life she had the insight that in pottery she knows she had to be experimental or she would do nothing.  That it is all “practice” and that sometimes she likes the piece enough to keep it and others are composted and she begins again.   She realized she has to live life this way.   That she has to be able to be experimental, make mistakes and start again. She said: “Nothing is perfect.  Nothing is done.  Safely never finished”.   It is true there is safety in being unfinished because if we had to live our lives with everything just so, everything ready to be in its final state. …we could not live.

Live a perfectly unfinished life.   I have told me daughter that when I die the box of college papers I could not part with, the file drawers of old campaigns I worked on and finacial papers, and old journals can go straight to recycle.  I have shown her where the one file is that has important legal paper work in it and where all the passwords to my computer stuff can be found.  I have told her to take what possessions of mine she wants and give away or dispose of the rest.  But I hope that whatever laundry is undone, dishes undone, projects or paperwork, that the expression of love, and the acts of kindness and the fight for justice has been done in a perfectly unfinished way!  I hope that I will feel that over all I have spent the hours of my life on the things that matter most.  


Sunday, March 31, 2019

On Death and Dying

A member of my Meeting has ALS and is slowly losing the use of each arm.   At his request our Meeting has held a session on Wisdom Weaving about how we live well into our dying.  Today we met with just two queries.  During our worship sharing time my head swirled with more queries and so I share them with you for your own reflection.

1) What have I learned from other people's death?

2) What do I believe happens when we die?

3) What is a life well lived?

4) Does death serve a useful purpose? ie what would it be like if we did not die?

5) Is there something useful about not knowing what happens when we die?

6)  What role do you believe God plays in death?

7)  Why do you believe people die under such different conditions?

8)  If the idea of reincarnation turned out to be true, what would the purpose of the soul living multiple times be?

9)  What kind of legacy do we live in the way we live?

10)  How do we graciously release others from this life even as we wish they remained?





Saturday, May 10, 2014

Held in the Light - a poem
















Dear Comforter, Source of all Light, hold us in our pain

Friends please hold me in the Light as I interview for this Job.

Friends hold my beloved in the Light as he is operated upon on Monday.

Hold this beloved one in Light and give the strength to overcome addiction and turn from it.

Oh God Hold me in the Light as I follow your lead and risk to be faithful.

Hold my parent, my child, my friend in the Light as they lie dying.

In the Light we are held by you all as we broken heartedly grieve.

Friends hold me in the Light as I find strength to speak truth to power.

Hold us in Light as we give birth to new beginnings.


Hallelujah Holy One celebrate with us!

Thank you Creator for the birth of this new life!

Thank you for the blessing of meaningful work and a place to do this work.

I'm grateful for this new love.

What a blessing to watch the joy and the unfolding of our children's lives.

Thank you for the kindness of the stranger today, and for the chance to be that kind stranger.

Thank you Lord for this life well lived, even as it parts from us we are grateful.

Oh Light, thank you for your Presence in our every passing moment!

Lynn Fitz-Hugh
5/10/2014


Sunday, September 11, 2011

Intentional Acts of Kindness

A month ago a colleague of mine died suddenly, one day after his 60th birthday.  He had a big birthday party with friends and family. A mutual colleague had flown to WY to be with him and then, as planned, the two of them went on a day hike the next day.  Towards the end, 1 mile from the trail head, Bob collapsed and, as was later established, died instantly of a massive heart attack.  Our mutual colleague emailed 60 of us who responded with a sort of online memorial service, sharing our shock, are sadness and our memories of Bob.  Bob had a huge heart (ironically considering how he died).  He was very kind to everyone, quick with humor and to aid another.  Someone asked his wife if she wanted flowers or donations or what, sent where?  Her response was she said "Do an act of kindness in memory of Bob". 

It seemed a perfectly fitting memorial.  My problem was I thought of several things I was already scheduled to do that were acts of kindness. Well, those did not seem to count - they would have occurred anyway.  What was big enough, or special enough, or not premeditated enough, or planned enough to count as the act of kindness for Bob?  While I was trying to figure this out, I noticed that my family members were irritating and pissing me off in any number of ways which was leaving me feeling very justified in responding in snarly ways. That when it felt like they were standing on my "emotional shoes" that I felt quite justified in getting them "off" my shoes. I certainly was not acting in kindness towards them.  Oh Bob, I hear you calling.

However, this was not as easy as it seemed.  I would notice time and again, after not being kind that I had forgotten my resolve.  This is really very embarrassing for a Quaker.  Hardly, walking over the earth answering cheerful to others, huh?  In fact, I do not think I have enough consecutive hours in, to in anyway, to say I have honored Bob yet.  

So today in Meeting for worship I was reflecting on this, trying to understand the problem and how I can get a handle on this and turn it around.  I was also aware of it being 9/11 and my feelings of judgment of this country that in our grief over 3,000 dead, we have caused the deaths many times over of American soldiers, Iraqi and Afghani soldiers and thousands of civilians.  I realized that just like me, this country in its pain and vulnerability reacted to protect itself and feels justified in doing so.  As I continued to wrestle with this, I saw the part of me that I feel I need to defend, a hurt little girl, and I mentally could pick her up and put her on God's lap.  From that vantage point I could feel the peace from which to be loving, compassionate and kind.   I hope that our country too can find its way to God's lap.


Sunday, March 20, 2011

Growing Towards the Light

Yesterday was a beautiful first day of spring.  I went outside to survey the garden.  In the fall my husband and son had replaced some logs that held a bank in place.  They had dropped cut pieces on the ground were months before flowers had been.  However, now in spring those same bulbs had tried to come forth, only to find their tender buds under boards.  I moved the offending boards to find that the plants, sensing a small crack of Light, had grown sideways till they reached the edge of the board and then up - in a sort of backwards L.

Hmmm,  I thought: Life is kind of like that.  We sense the Light, even when it is only a small glint of it, and we grow towards the Light.

Recently for our anniversary my husband and I were looking at the photoes from our wedding 4 years ago.  Everyone is familiar, but older.  In the kids cases, they are a foot taller now and more "mature" looking, but for most of us, it means more grey hair and more wrinkles.  Yes, I thought, the slow march towards death.  Huh, how does that fit with my previous thought that all life grows towards the Light?

Then I realized - oh yes, it is the same.  Our slow march towards death is also the path back to the Eternal Light.  It seems some of us will live shorter lives than we thought we would and others will live much longer than they thought they would.  So what of the march - does it matter if all our days our numbered, how we spend those days? How do we make our days count?  I think it is not some "productive doing", but rather have we lived those days with Love and with Light?  Have you grown towards the Light today?