I
can see that a lot of people have been keeping an eye on this blog for an
update, so thanks are due to them. I haven’t been writing for some time. It’s
become tough enough to carry on maintaining a semblance of the ‘normal’ working
life as it is.
‘There
are,’ Professor Dumbledore said to Tom Riddle, echoing countless real-life
sages of yore, ‘things far worse than death.’ I can see it happening to my
father. It is not death itself that is horrid, but the dying – if the dying is so incredibly slow and painful and
pathetic, for the person concerned as much as those around him who must tend
and wait and beg for release.
For
the last several years he has been much less than a whole man, and it’s been
more than a year now that he has been bedridden off and on. But since mid-April
he’s been a complete invalid, and that is going on five months now. Even with
two nurses working alternately round the clock, it was becoming so awful a
burden for my infinitely-suffering mother that both she and I, brooding aloud,
have lamented that there is no law allowing for euthanasia yet: that such a
law, at least benefiting the very old and terminally ill, should become one
indispensable hallmark of any society that dares to call itself civilized. The
least I can say for myself is that I would not want to hang on like this for my
daughter to serve with sick and bone-weary despair, putting her entire life on
hold. That is not love, that is socially-imposed torture of the cruelest sort
upon the living.
Five
days ago he began to choke, with fluid accumulating in the straining and
failing lungs. We moved him into the ICU of a nearby hospital, where they have been pumping out the fluid while
keeping him under an oxygen mask and feeding him through intravenous drips. He
is comatose most of the time, can hardly articulate his words when he is awake,
and though there are short lucid intervals, what he says doesn’t make any sense
at all most of the time. By some miracle he is not in any significant pain –
probably thanks to the same brain tumour which has immobilized him – but what a
ghastly way to hang on! What marvellous progress science has made, indeed, to
be able to drag on a vegetative and deeply undignified existence for a few more
days or weeks! Last night he was transferred to a general bed, but still in
exactly the same condition, and all that the experts can tell us to do is to
brace up and wait… as if that is not exactly what we have been doing for more
days than we have kept count of.
I
would not wish this upon my worst enemy, and this is my father I am talking
about.
And
all the time, day in and day out, I have to keep acting in the classroom and
the neighbourhood as if it’s more or less just business as usual. Because I
have to earn my daily bread, and I don’t do a salaried job or live on a pension
or inheritance.
Dear
God, have mercy.
P.S., September 11: He was back in the ICU yesterday after exactly one day in the general ward.
P.S., September 11: He was back in the ICU yesterday after exactly one day in the general ward.
5 comments:
Sir,
Praying.
Take care.
Rajdeep
So sorry to hear this! Stay strong, Sir. My prayers are with you.
Regards,
Joydeep
Dear Sir,
My prayers are with you. Take care.
With regards,
Saikat.
Respected Sir,
Only prayers- sincerely wish that would somehow matter!
True - how helpless we are so many times in our life & how little choice we have when we really want some!
Regards
Sir,
My prayers for a swift and dignified passing for your father. What kind of brain tumor does he have? Aren't there any hospice options available in India, instead of this back and forth from the ICU?
As a society, we do not do a good job coming to terms with death, and letting go. Fortunately, in the US, medical schools have now recognized this and are training physicians to counsel patients on end of life care, and emphasize palliative care and hospice options instead of ICU care and invasive procedures.
Harman
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