Friday, September 30, 2011

Die Trying: Part II

One of the many family jokes at my expense is about my Type A personality. Several of us are taken prisoner by terrorists of some kind.  “We are going to shoot one of you every hour," the burly leader threatens.  “I’ll go first!” I yelp.  My cool, calm son-in-law, Tim, would say, “I’ll go last, and I would also like to go over this plan with you.” He’s an investment counselor, so he’s used to money--volatility, extreme nervousness, and Type A folks like me, who like the Rainbow trout in our famous Yellowstone River, leap for the first fly.  [I must mention here that I do eat fish, but I do not catch them. I leave such sport to Bruce Hafen and Vic Forsnes, two experts who also find time to read books and do tons of church work.]

It did not surprise my wife, when for my 40th birthday, I treated myself to a DNR bracelet. “Do Not Resuscitate.” Good fortune and the Lord’s protection kept me safe for my wife and family until everyone was squared away... sort of.

When Carolyn passed away, I (as the kids say), “tricked out" myself with an additional DNR necklace the size of a Harley Davidson Motorcycle chain.

When I moved to Austin, however, I found myself in the paper-chase capital of the US.  Only the Germans love stamp-pads, duplicate copies, and legal work more than Texans.

Jumping through the hoops, I became completely paranoid.  I added reduced-size copies of my Living Will to my necklace, a list of my children’s phone numbers, my attorney’s number and copies of all ephemera in my bedroom. Sharon and Steve Oakey can testify of my madness.  When I told them what I was schlepping around my neck, they doubted.  I lifted my shirt, which was about as horrifying as lifting a pant leg. There dangled a deck of documents that looked like a cool hand right out of Vegas.

When I moved to Texas to live with my daughter, Lora and her family, Austin officials told me I was “completely unofficial.”  My Living Will is invalid in Texas, so I hired a new attorney for a Living Will which includes the added word "TEXAS."

And yes, I also had to buy new DNR bling, engraved “Texas style”: “Texas OOH," which translated into Idahoan means, “In the country of Texas, do not resuscitate me Outside Of Hospital.” But my paranoia still drives me to wonder whether a rookie nurse would know what she should not do inside the hospital.

Finally, full of frustration, I wrote the Surgeon General.  I’m guessing it’s the gal with the uniform and all that fruit salad on her chest.  My complaint went unanswered, though I was sent an interview schedule should I wish to fly to Washington DC to talk things over.  I leave you with the paragraph that sums up the agitation of a transplanted Idahoan, where rules are anathema.

“My point, Madam/Staff member/General, is that I’m still trying to figure out just what one must do here in order to have a “clean” death.  How in the Hell does one die inexpensively and quickly?  How do I stay in the Tunnel before an overly-anxious intern pulls me back into the relentless heat and drought of this place?  Like Rick, in “Casablanca,” I was “misinformed about Texas being part of these United States.  The folks here tell me I need a separate, unique Texas Living Will.  What happens, General, if some tourist from South Dakota happens to face-plant in downtown Austin while on vacation?” 

So, take this for what it’s worth.  Probably nothing.  At an assisted care facility in Rexburg, of 80 patients, only 5 had DNRs.  Someone has to pay the light bill in that building on the hill.  I think I know who.  Let me end this jaundiced diatribe with a book suggestion that just might change your life—and your death:  Susan Jacoby’s, Never Say Die.


4 comments:

  1. Your death posts aren't getting as many comments--just sayin :) I had a good conversation with my mother yesterday about death though neither (both in their 60s) have tricked out on bracelets yet. Although she did finally read Atul Gawande's amazing essay, "Letting Go," (which you know Larry) a personal look at several families working through end of life care. This article makes one question what it means to fight and extend one's life: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/02/100802fa_fact_gawande

    Ron

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  2. Ron,
    I've special ordered two DNR bracelets for your folks for Christmas--I bought a third, rather fetching, blinged-out anklet for your mom's shapely legs. I'm still alive!! Old Son, Still Shining

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  3. I'm afraid if I were present to read the DNR bracelet and the fine print of all your dog tags, I couldn't bring myself to not apply what boy scout artificial respiration I couldn't remember for sure in case you had a change of heart once you slipped out of consciousness. Or maybe out of desperation to avoid the loss of your friendship.

    You could sue me later. That's back to Thomas's "Curse, bless me now with your fierce tears." Your curse (or lawsuit) I would gladly endure for your continued (my selfish) presence.

    donny

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  4. Donny, how sweet that you would allow love to override law. You have "blessed" me often while I was in my "fierce tears." All those wild rides to LDS Third North, the emotional illness wing, where Carolyn set up house-keeping. And there was the lonely and for me fearful drive to IF, to their Emotional Behavior Wing. You read in the car while Carolyn and I played Parcheesi. We needed Nita, a board game aficionado, to carry me and Carolyn through that Thorazine fog. That was the trip when you told me that after you read The Ambassadors that you "walked the streets of Rexburg." I will work that in because there is no better example of literature moving a person- in wintry Rexburg. Thanks for your compliments, coming not only from a friend but a poet-writer. If I visit you in the suburbs of Rigby I'll be in a glass bubble so you can't get at me, should I begin "going gently into that Good Night." And here, I thought you were my backup. After all, you told Billy that a man "can do good things other places"--in The Other World. That comforts, coming from a man who has spent a goodly portion of his life in sacred space.

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