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Share your thoughts and impressions here after reading Richard's "Hearing the Worst from your Doctor " blog posting about a patient who is reduced to the inability to move a muscle, speak, or even blink.
i hope i could do so. i hope i could tell the right time -- that is, sometime before i was unable to do it unaided by another.
i've thought about this. i've thought about whether it would be worse to live, alert and sentient, in a grotesquely distorted shell, or to be as my mother was, able to get out of bed, to eat, to drink, but having forgotten why she would ever want to do any of those things. richard's friend was still alive; my mother was already dead.
this is a judgment i made long ago. for me, timing is the only detail left.
-- susie margaret
NOT SURE I COULD DO IT...HOPE I COULD ....BET THEN MORRIE WENT OUT THE WAY WE SHOULD..
TIFF
Find what is good in your life. Revel in what you can do. Think. Feel. Suicide is fashionable. I always wonder why an MS patient used his services, except if it really was the worst case scenario. ALS I could understand. Please keep fighting. Being dead is really boring.
My best,
RMC
Best,
RMC
Where to start - How to start -
I too have MS - revealing is difficult for me - I'm not sure I know how to open up or chat -
My diagnosis has come at a great cost to me - I hate this -
To becoming strong in broken places -
purpleslippersorangebedsocks
It is good to hear from you. I know how difficult it is to share, how painful to reveal. I also know that we construct monsters in our heads. We allow MS to overtake and take over our identities because those two letters are all we see when we gaze into the mirror. I went through that when I was younger, even though I was a successful journalist with many friends.
You are not your disease. I'll bet I could make you smile if I met you. Please break out of your funk. Help others and smile. Live your life. We are too afraid of others, which is why we stay in the closet. It is dark in there, and all you get is a runaway imagination and socks and slippers that do not match.
My best,
RMC
Please know that my words to follow are not intended as criticism and that I have indeed thought long and hard before posting this reply.
It took me great courage to add my posting and after reading RMC's reply I actually found myself somewhat encouraged to add a further posting. I found warmth in his words and indeed did even smile! I needed this at that time. I appreciated it.
But alas, this welcomed feeling that was beginning to bring me out of my shell felt as though it was crudely stolen from me as I read your comments re things being a "sin".
I do not judge your vierwpoints and thank you for you wish of peace. Please know though your posting did far from bring me peace.
Please respect my choice to reply to your posting without disrepect for your beliefs. Please also know I think my beliefs are for me to form and not to be judged by others who hold contrasting viewpoints.
I wish you well in life, though feel it is only respectful that we acknowledge the potential for impact (good, bad or indifferent), of the words we write and how we write them.
I wish you continued strengths in your beliefs and support they bring you, though may they not be used to make judgement of mine.
Regards
And then some days are glorious. I can go sit outside and bask in the sun and in God's love. I get to hear and see the joy of my adopted brother and parents. I have opportunities to give back for all the blessings I have had bestowed on me.
And I've considered this, especially on those bad days. But for me, even on those horrid days, I choose life. And that's today. I can't say what tomorrow would bring.
My grandfather had Alzheimers. He went from being a sportsman and hunter, to being confined in a hospital (despite our family trying desperately to get him released to our care, very long story). He worked for months to get a weekend pass, and killed himself while at home.
Mentally, I totally understand. His life was intolerable. He was still mentally functional and what was happening to him was pure torture. I hold no ill feelings towards him for making this choice.
But 27 years later, I'm still in pain over this. He didn't say goodbye, he didn't give us a chance to make things different, and he knew we were trying. This has caused a significant amount of pain and anger amongst the family, that I don't believe will ever be healed.
So, my choice will always be to live, to make the best of my life as I can and to know that the gift of my life is not one I can throw away lightly.
Despite my severe limitations, I hold a volunteer job, I have started and run two support groups for people with fibromyalgia, I do a significant amount of awareness raising for fibro and I run a support page on facebook that currently has 800 members. I just started blogging for an integrative wellness website. I do live with Fibro written across my forehead, but I live the best life I can and I enjoy every moment of it, even when I can't get out of bed.
Thank you for a great topic. I hope everyone knows my opinions are for me, I would never presume to say what choices someone else should make for their life. I too have religious beliefs, but those are mine, and in all honesty, even with the thinking I do about this, my religious beliefs factor in very little. I have had to think more about what is right for me.
Aimee
Best,
RMC
Good choice. Let others do what they believe is right for them. Obviously, you believe in yourself and find joy where you can. Never lose those qualities.
My best,
RMC
My father is wandering down that very road. I don't know where it will lead...
What I do know is he's been the best dad I could ever have and I can accept whatever he decides is best.
You're right. Our lives are meant to be shared. But, we also have a right to make our own decisions, too. Think about it. Who else is more qualified?
I trust my dad with no reservations. Whatever he decides, I know if was for the right reasons.
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