I occasionally flip my car radio to the right-wing AM station to get my blood pumping and to keep up on what people with a different worldview are thinking. When I did this last week, I wasn't too surprised to hear the topic of the afternoon call-in program was Brittany Maynard, a terminally ill California woman who moved to Oregon to take advantage of the state's death with dignity law and end her own life.
Read more: Terminally ill Brittany Maynard takes her own life
The fact that an attractive young woman made this decision and shared it with the world had caught the media's attention and reignited debate on the issue of physician-assisted suicide. Her story also caught my interest, as I have gone through the slow and painful cancer death of my own wife.
Listening to the call-in program last week, I felt empathy right away for the first caller, a widower who had recently lost his wife to heart disease. But then the caller said that Maynard's husband should have talked her out of her decision. He was sure that her husband would regret losing her before the last possible moment. The caller said that he would give anything to have one more hour with his wife. I'm sure that is a common attitude, especially if the loved one has died suddenly, but it is not my experience. I would give anything to not have experienced the last week of my wife's life.
As I see it, Maynard gave her husband a gift. She gave him a gift by preventing painful images from being burned into his brain. He will not have memories of his beloved gradually losing her mind and control over her bodily functions. He will not have memories of watching the person he loves most moaning in pain, and not being able to do anything about it. He will not have memories like the ones I have-of vomit and bedsores and things so horrible that I cannot bring myself to type them into this keyboard. He will not have memories of reaching the point where he started wishing that his wife, his partner of 38 years whom he loved with all his heart, would die. Those memories don't go away; they come back in dreams and nightmares.