Lathyrus3
There are certain conditions where even the very best palliative care cannot ease the suffering, mental and physical.
It’s a fact that people, perhaps especially those medics who have made palliative care their specialism, try to fudge. Maybe because they see it so much it becomes normal to them.
Suicide is no long criminal, but it is difficult to do. To be certain, without involving somebody else in some way.
There's no getting away from these three statements, as far as I can see, due to my life experience.
My dad suffered a long, drawn out, painful and fearful death over years, and really needed to be let away from his suffering.
He had no hope for recovery in those days, needing a heart and lungs. Every breath was an agony and too big an effort both for him, and to watch.
He was also incapable of much movement and therefore killing himself was not an easy option. Eventually, he asked me (as a young woman), to please try and get him a gun so he could do it himself.
He was that desperate, and of course I could not do that and was left feeling like I had let him down in his time of great need.
I hope and pray that in the not too far-distant future, the option of assisted death becomes available to those in this type of situation, where palliative care would just prolong the agony.