R
Rob_s_Wife
Guest
It is humiliating, very much so. Neither my wife nor I felt uncomfortable doing it, we considered them as if they were our children, and parents have no qualms about cleaning their infants. But these people are NOT infants, they have their feelings, which are uncomfortable (to say the least) being so much exposed.
There are ways around that to both make things physically easier and to make the patient more comfortable. Colosotomy bags for one. Hospice nurses for another. For my mother it was not wanting her children or dh to lose respect for her given her condition (which wouldn’t have happened regardless, but those were her emotions). So the home nurse did all those things, which made my mother feel much better.
And, yes, it is my view that everyone should be allowed to leave this world at their discretion and forcing them to live against their explicit wish is not right. My number one priority is permissiveness, and I don’t accept the use of force except in self-defense.
We can whitewash the term all we want, but the bottom line is that killing someone sooner than nature/God would have it happen is murder. Suicide is the taking of one’s OWN life. The very nature of suicide insinuates an unbalanced mental state. It is not in human nature to want to die.
You and others said (either explicitly or implicitly) that suffering has value. I would like to ask one question: Do you practice what you preach? When you go to the dentist for a painful session, do you tell the dentist NOT to give you a painkiller injection? When you have a migraine, do you reject a medication to help you?
**We are talking about life’s pain here. To compare taking a tylenol with killing someone is obviously comparing apples to brocoli. No one here is saying a dying patient shouldn’t be made as comfortable as possible. No one is advocating prolonging the pain either. If a patient is near the end, there is nothing wrong with letting nature take it’s course. **
**There is value to pain. Childbirth for example. (and contrary to what many think there is no way to make it completely painless - even a c-section has pain afterwards) The pain of losing a loved one when they die. The pain of seeing a loved one suffer. **
**Being willing to suffer to spare another or to have a chance to do the right thing yourself - these are worthy pains of life. The only way they can be avoided is to not live life to any fullness. They make us stronger people. They give us compassion for others and make us value life’s joys more. They allow us to see goodness and to call evil what it is. **
To use your migraine medication theory…
**Yes, I have turned down pain medications before. I’ve turned them down when I felt breastfeeding was best and didn’t want to drug my baby. I’ve turned them down when they would make me too tired to give the care my children need of me. I’ve suffered horrible pains because it was better to suffer than to let the pain rule my life. **
My dh suffers multiple daily injections and needle sticks and more for the past 26 years because he would rather live suffering them - than let those pains become more important than his love for us. It has made him a man of devotion to his family, care for his fellow man, and allowed him to see the grace of God where others see hopelessness.
**Suffering is the door through which people become saints and heros. Is there no value to those that suffered and/or died in the Holocaust for sheltering a Jew or took the place of another in the gas chambers knowing that other person still had a child to care for? Is there no value to the suffering of people who live/work in horrible conditions saving every penny to make their children’s future brighter? Is their no value to the suffering of a neighbor going into a burning building to save someone else’s kid or grandmother and living with horrible scars and pains for the rest of their life? **Is there no value to the suffering of a husband watching his wife die - yet glad God gave him one more day with her? Should children not be given bikes because they may have to suffer an injury?
Suffering is real - no one here is denying those facts. It is also a vital part of living.