"Dying is easy it's living that scares me." Cold Album -Anne Lennox
On July 20, 2015, long time British Nurse Gill Pharaoh shared a dinner with her husband as they cruised down the Rhine. The next day, she entered a Swiss clinic. With her husband present, Nurse Pharaoh (in photo) voluntarily received a dose of a life-ending drug.
Ms. Pharaoh was seventy-five. She was in excellent mental & physical health. "I only have a few aches and pains but I feel my life is complete. I'm ready to die," she said.
Her explanation can pierce the hearts of caregivers everywhere. Gill spent her career caring for the frail elderly. She did not wish to become one of them. She felt so strongly about this that she took the ultimate step.
It is easy to condemn her decision & the laws that make it possible in some parts of the world. It is more difficult to seek to understand Pharaoh's choice.
A new film portrays the life & suicide of the widely acclaimed author David Foster Wallace. In a two-page note Wallace left he offers a compelling analogy. Many of those who commit suicide, he writes, feel as if they are in a burning building. They must jump to avoid the agony of remaining.
Though Pharaoh also took her life her case is different & strange. Pharaoh saw a "building" she felt was on fire & decided not to enter it. She wanted to avoid the indignities of a compromised existence in the house of the elderly. She wanted to tell us that too many people are living too long in ways that burden others.
Gill Pharaoh's career was a triumph of loving care. Did her choice to die tarnish her legacy, enhance it, or offer some other commentary worthy of reflection?
-Reverend Erie Chapman

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