End of Life Planning – “Good to go” from NPR broadcast

End of life planning — “The Book”

Settling the affairs of someone who dies is a onerous task. It must be started concurrent with grieving. There are all sorts of legalities. Tax issues. Bills due, memorial planning, and often family issues long dormant need to be handled.
My mother-in-law, before she died at 97, created “the book”  for her end of life planning method. She had references to all insurance, bank accounts, wills, and directives, My sister-in-law, the estate administrator, still did not have an easy time. It is just plain a lot of work, some sleuthing, learning about the legalities. And yet in comparison with when my dad died, it was an easy job. Because she had “The Book.”

Susan and I have been compiling our own form of “The Book.”  We call it the “Red Book” because it’s in a red binder. We know there are still missing things. Our will needs updating, not all financial items are detailed, but we do have medical directives, passwords, body donor papers, and everything we have been able to think of, detailed.

“Good to go” – a to do list

It’s the “everything we have been able to think of” that is the problem. We don’t know what we are missing. So, the other morning when I heard the NPR Morning edition news cast about a woman who has started a business helping people create “the book” which she, Amy Pickard, calls the “Good to Go” files. She has an outline of items to be included. She provides phone or skype interviews to those who wish support, and she encourages parties to help  friends and family become aware of the need for “Good to go” files. “Everyone, at all ages”, she says, “needs this.”

I thoroughly endorse the concept that she is doing, but I personally haven’t seen her material, and since Susan and I are well along on our own notebook we probably won;t buy her $55 dollar outline. If  you do, I’d appreciate your review of the material in the comments section below.

NPR Interview

“Good to Go” website

 

Loving and Dying

“Nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes” – Benjamin Franklin

Dying is a controversial topic. Which, from some sort of logical standpoint, seems strange as it’s the one thing that we all have in common with each other. Sometime, some place, we will all die.

And should it not be part of our humanity to make decisions about dying ourselves – not the government and not the church.

Dying with Dignity

In Oregon we have the “Death with Dignity act. With personal awareness, and two doctor certified evaluations that end of life, because of disease, is within 6 months, a person may elect to receive drugs that they alone can drink, no help from anyone, and then when the pain is too great, take the drugs – or not.

Many suffer through pain knowing they have alleviation at hand. Others use the drug to eliminate physical pains, already understanding that suffering through pain may give them only a few extra- not precious, but painful – weeks.

A documentary

Here is a video documentary of one family, and one couple who decided to use the death with dignity approach.

Loving and dying

There are certainly those who have a belief system that says you may not hasten your own demise. But, when it is technology that is providing a unhealthy additional week or two I would certainly not be the one to condemn.