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Dec 21, 2007, 03:12 PM
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poopsiebublnose
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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Thank you Karen. I needed to read this thread.
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Dec 22, 2007, 10:25 AM
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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Chybil…
I was gone a couple of days.
The 2nd half of the story about the student and his guru has to do with how we think about or rate reality. We (westerners anyway) think of things like “imagination” and “intent” as sort of diaphanous… gauzy… ethereal. In other words, not concrete or not particularly real. And certainly we think of “illusion” as not very real… if not flat out unreal. We think of things like rocks & trees as being “real.” Ironically, physicists now tell us that everything in the physical realm is technically an illusion. Carlos Castenada’s teacher (the Jacqui Indian Man Of Knowledge he calls “Don Juan” in his many books) claimed that a tree is a tree only because we (people) agree it is a tree. Fred Alan Wolf (physicist) says (in his book, “User’s Guide To The Universe) that he agrees with a Shaman who told him all matter is simply vibration.
But we are inclined to not take things seriously when we do not consider them to be concretely real. We live in a very materialistic society, so things that are not material we say are not “in the real world.” Which has a lot to do with why we have such a problem with “life” (the non-physical variety) after death.
One day a friend of mine was talking to me about “manifesting” things… physical stuff. By way of example he was telling me how he “manifested” a car. I won’t go into all the details, but basically he was talking about wanting a new car, thinking about it, creating a mental image of it, focusing energy etc, and finally one day, he “manifested” a new car… into the “real world.”
But think about that…
Cars come & go here in the physical realm. Nothing here ever lasts. Eventually cars and rocks and trees and bodies rust or rot or crumble away. What stays the same are things like imagination and intent. Indeed, it is things like imagination and intent that bring things like cars & trees etc. into existence in the first place… albeit transiently. So what is more real… a rock or a thought?
The student interpreted his guru’s statement that the world is an illusion to mean that he would not take it terribly seriously. If his son died, so what? It’s all just an illusion anyway. Big deal.
But illusion or not, dying is still a VERY BIG DEAL.
The point being, we really ought to re-think what we think. Not being physical (or attached to a physical body) has nothing to do with how “real” we are… yet we spend our lives thinking (every day) that non-material things are not really real. Then, when we are about to die, it dawns on us that we about to become unreal. We lay a trap for ourselves and then step right in!
The point of an illusion is to create an experience… which sets up thinking patterns and emotion. To work, an illusion only has to be believable… but it certainly does not have to be material. Non-physical reality is just as real as physical reality… perhaps even more so.
One of the defining characteristics of so-called paranormal experience (as reported by people who have experienced such things) is that it seems even more real than mundane (physical) experience.
We really need to pay more attention to what the dying tell us. They are not all simply nuts. When they report “seeing something real” it might not just be the dope. How many (unlike Leslie) would have told that 7 year old terminally ill girl, “Now honey… you know I don’t have a light in my head.”
When dealing with the dying (when dealing with life) we really ought to work on expanding what we think of as “real.”
Michael
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Dec 22, 2007, 11:38 AM
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Senior Member
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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It is amazing to me how most of the dying I've dealt with see their deceased relatives. I even had one patient who saw his dog he had in childhood. So far every single one has seen someone from the past. I try to validate these experiences for the dying. Interestingly the family sometimes has the most problems dealing with this part of the dying process. Is it real or an illusion? I can't see them (and I wish I could), but I don't doubt that they are very real to the person who is dying. If it's an illusion, does that make it any less real? Hmmm.....
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Dec 23, 2007, 11:06 AM
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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tencat…
It has long seemed to me that dying process is unique in that it provides glimpses into the very essence of things… of human beings… and of the very nature of reality. Yet we don’t study it. It is like stumbling onto an ancient text that contains insights into unprocessed, unadulterated truth… but then not even bothering to read it. Most hospice nurses know, on some level, that what they are dealing with is extraordinary. Indeed, that is undoubtedly one of the prime attractions of hospice nursing… the sense of awe and wonder that it inspires. And still the academic world ignores it almost completely.
When, for example, a dying elderly man “sees” a dog he had as a child what does that mean? That his old dog exists still on some timeless level? Does it mean that his consciousness or point of attention has become unattached to this point in time and gone back to an earlier time? Does it mean that his consciousness is capable of projecting a separate reality onto his own personal screen? Or should we simply fall back into the cozy but simplistic position of accepting the lowest common denominator of possibility recognition and conclude, “It’s the meds. Let’s try turning down the morphine, cranking up the Haldol and see what happens.”
Incredibly valuable data, observed by hospice nurses virtually every day, is simply ignored by academia. In the article that instigated this thread (I think… it’s been awhile since I read it) there was a reference to a “study” in which statistical data was being compiled regarding how long before actual death patients lost consciousness… which seemed to imply that patients always lose consciousness prior to death, it’s just a question of how long before. Actually, that is not true. Some patients cross over wide awake… and as a function of their choice (as opposed to being evicted by a non-functional body with no choice in the matter.)
An effective study would also compile data on the nature of the thinking patterns exhibited by dying pts that tend (statistically) to yield long versus short versus no period of unconsciousness prior to actual death.
The possibilities for areas of in-depth and potentially enlightening inquiry are endless. Yet academia acts almost totally clueless. One can only scratch one’s head and wonder why.
Actually, I am sure this will change. But when? What will it take to trip that trigger?
Michael
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Dec 23, 2007, 08:04 PM
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Registered Nut
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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i don't think academia will redirect its focus, anytime in the near future.
there is just too much spiritual, unexplainable phenomena that occurs w/the dying.
and as long as it remains unexplainable, or an event that science/physics cannot measure and calculate, then the unexplainable will be appeased by haldol.
that's the bottom line.
and that is why it is critical for hospice nurses to be their pt's advocates...
to explore and go for the ride.
if we don't do it, who will support these people in this extraordinary transition?
but even as it stands now, (too) many hospice nurses would rather suppress these realities with sedatives/antipsychotics, rather than delve into this dimension of infinite energy.
the qualifications for hospice nsg, should not be limited to a, b and c criteria.
i wish that in order to work hospice, one should have to accept and embrace, spiritual events.
if all hospice workers, observed and reported the extraordinary occurrences, perhaps some credence would be lent to all of us who experience it.
i can always hope...
leslie
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Dec 23, 2007, 08:31 PM
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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Leslie...
Yea... you may be right. Let's keep hoping and plugging away though.
Michael
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Dec 25, 2007, 11:59 AM
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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Dear Leslie & Michael,
I'm slowly being dragged along with your insightfulness
and only wish the 'lightbulb' was brighter. I'm sorry for
the inference some time ago that "new age" did not belong
in this post. "New age" is where we are, it's difficult to ignore
the truth. Experienced Hospice nurses as yourselves have incorporated
the truth more readily, a newbie as myself is still trying to assure some
level of competency to adequately manage symptoms.
It has been my limited experience to witness a few extraordinary deaths,
but for the most part, most of my deaths have been textbook physical deaths
without any auras. Quite a few have seen dead relatives, and I've grown comfortable
with this, and don't over-medicate out of fear, despite family concerns. I've learned
to spend more time (not nearly enough) holding hands and listening; but, I'm not
getting those extraordinary events. Why not? Do you think it has anything to do
with the intellect/spirituality of the patient/nurse? Or is it just my inpatience?
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Dec 25, 2007, 04:49 PM
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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Allow Mystery…
Good question… very good question. I wish I had a very good answer.
Sometimes when something extraordinary happens it doesn’t really sink in for awhile… not until later do you begin to think, “You know what? That was rather odd now that I think about it.”
Then too, there are times when it starts to sink in, but then your doubts and “rational self” take over and whisper in your ear, “That wasn’t really real you know… it was just a coincidence. Don’t be a fool, let it go.” At that point it will be up to you to decide whether to “let it in” or “throw it out.”
Sometimes things happen when you least expect them. When I “saw” a pt on the ceiling at the moment of death it was just after leaning back in a chair, relaxing as much as I could, taking some deep breaths and deliberately clearing my mind of its usual and habitual chatter.
We constantly talk to ourselves. Think about what is going on in your head… the internal dialogue is virtually non-stop. Carlos Castenada’s Jacqui Indian teacher told him that we (humans) “spin” this world with our constant inner dialogue. He explained that to alter one’s perspective of the world one must learn to stop the internal dialogue. In his book, The Crack In The Cosmic Egg, Joseph Chilton Pearce calls this internal dialogue, “Roof Brain Chatter.” It is not hard to imagine that with a few billion people all chattering away in their heads we might be able to spin a collective reality… a shared dream. Also, in order to meditate one must first shut off the roof brain chatter. It is hard to do. The roof brain keeps wanting to start talking again, so you have to keep telling it to, “Shut Up!!!!”
When I was sitting in that room with a dying pt and his entire (large) family, it just so happened that I shut off my roof brain chatter just a moment prior to his passing. As luck would have it, when he left his body my mind was blank… my usual perspective of the world was shut down… and I “saw” him. But after my roof brain chatter turned back on I could not “see” him any more.
But that’s okay, I know what I saw. You don’t. For you my story is just a story. For me it was real. I know there are things gong on around us that we cannot usually see… because I caught a glimpse once… and every once in awhile can sense it still.
The moment when you suddenly & unexpectedly “see” or “hear” or “feel” or “sense” something extraordinary, it will be personal. For you it will be real. If you tell someone about it they will view it as a story (or you as a crackpot.) If you tell someone about it when you are dying they will think you’re “hallucinating,” probably secondary to “hypoxia” or being a little too “doped up.” But for you it will be real.
Some people are just sensitive to certain things. Recently I received an email from a person who can “sense” what dying (comatose) or dead people are saying. That is a gift. I don’t have it, but some people do.
I’ve had Native Americans tell me they can see things we (non-Indians) do not. They expect to and do, we expect not to and don’t. But it is not easy to just change one’s expectations… you have to be born into that culture or work hard at letting go of the one you were born into.
James Redfield (author of the Celestine Prophecy et al) talks a lot about “syncronicity” (sp?) Basically it has to do with “coincidences.” We experience coincidences all the time, and it is very easy to dismiss a coincidence as just a plain old ordinary coincidence.
According to normal, western, classical scientific thought, the universe is dead. Everything that happens here is coincidence… from the formation of planets, stars & galaxies to inorganic chemistry to organic chemistry to big-brained intellectuals and poets. It’s all just one gigantic accident in a dead universe.
For most civilizations however (other than our current, modern, western one) the universe is alive… the whole darned thing is alive! And it is constantly speaking to us… very often through its coincidences.
Personally, I prefer a living universe to a dead one, so I gravitate towards world-views other than the prevailing western one I was born into. It is winter here in New Mexico, so when I get up in the morning it is chilly. I start my coffee and a fire in the wood stove. When the coffee is done I turn off all the lights and watch the shadows from the fire dance all over the walls. Then I select something nice from my collection… say a good Native American flute CD for example… then get comfortable and drift… sometimes thinking, sometimes meditating.
It works for me.
I do hope you are having a wonderful Christmas.
Michael
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Dec 25, 2007, 08:21 PM
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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Merry Christmas Michael.
Sharona
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Dec 25, 2007, 09:24 PM
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Registered Nut
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Re: Managing symptoms for a “good death”
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to be as simplistic as possible, i happen to think that if one is receptive and hypervigilantly aware of energy fields, this will be your experience.
and nothing surprises you.
whenever i share a spiritual connection, i don't even question it.
if anything, i find it comforting.
if i go 'looking', i will not find.
if i exist in a state of 'being', stuff happens.
one of my son's teachers, had her father in hospice.
she shared w/me, that she saw his spirit 'whoosh' out of his body and up through the ceiling, at his time of death.
i only responded, "how lovely for you".
but our eyes connected, and we understood ea other.
often, i find words wasteful.
most of my life, i have been guided by energy/spiritual events.
it is an integral part of who i am.
but that is me.
so, for me to have these experiences as a hospice nurse, is only a natural extension of who i am.
i don't know how to expound on others experiences, or lack of them.
i suppose, when the thought of spirits don't frighten someone, things can happen.
allow, i hope your day was a blessed one.
you too, michael and sharona.
leslie
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