The Art of Dying Well: A Practical Guide to a Good End of Life
By Katy Butler
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About this ebook
“A common sense path to define what a ‘good’ death looks like” (USA TODAY), The Art of Dying Well is about living as well as possible for as long as possible and adapting successfully to change. Packed with extraordinarily helpful insights and inspiring true stories, award-winning journalist Katy Butler shows how to thrive in later life (even when coping with a chronic medical condition), how to get the best from our health system, and how to make your own “good death” more likely. Butler explains how to successfully age in place, why to pick a younger doctor and how to have an honest conversation with them, when not to call 911, and how to make your death a sacred rite of passage rather than a medical event. This handbook of preparations—practical, communal, physical, and spiritual—will help you make the most of your remaining time, be it decades, years, or months.
Based on Butler’s experience caring for aging parents, and hundreds of interviews with people who have successfully navigated our fragmented health system and helped their loved ones have good deaths, The Art of Dying Well also draws on the expertise of national leaders in family medicine, palliative care, geriatrics, oncology, and hospice. This “empowering guide clearly outlines the steps necessary to prepare for a beautiful death without fear” (Shelf Awareness).
Katy Butler
Katy Butler’s articles have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Best American Science Writing, and The Best American Essays. A finalist for a National Magazine Award, she lives in Northern California. She is the author of Knocking on Heaven’s Door and The Art of Dying Well.
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Reviews for The Art of Dying Well
26 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Being Mortal is a book of ideas about end of life issues. This is a book of practical suggestions to implement some of those ideas (or similar ones). It is divided into chapters by age--not chronological age but "age" based on mental and physical health and abilities, starting with the ending of older middle-age (or the beginning of younger old age). There are lots of things to think about and to do so that one can "live well" as long as possible, and to allow one to "die well." I didn't yet read the chapters relating to old "old age," because I'm not there yet, but I ended up buying it to refer to in the future. I think everyone 50 or older (or who cares for someone 50 or older) could benefit from reading this book, could learn how to thrive in later life, and to make death not a medical event.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent organization and practical advice.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Feels like I'm being given checklists.
Book preview
The Art of Dying Well - Katy Butler
ADDITIONAL PRAISE FOR KATY BUTLER AND
The Art of Dying Well
"Butler’s factual, no-nonsense tone is surprisingly comforting, as are her stories of how ordinary folks confronted difficult medical decisions.… Her thoughtful book belongs on the same shelf as Atul Gawande’s bestselling Being Mortal and Barbara Ehrenreich’s Natural Causes."
—The Washington Post
No, you won’t survive your death, but you can live until the very last moment without the pain and humiliation that inevitably accompany an overmedicalized dying process. Katy Butler shows how, and I am profoundly grateful to her for doing so.
—Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Natural Causes
"This is a book to devour, discuss, dog-ear, and then revisit as the years pass. Covering matters medical, practical, financial, and spiritual—and, beautifully, their intersection—Katy Butler gives wise counsel for the final decades of our ‘wild and precious’ lives. A crucial addition to the bookshelves of those seeking agency, comfort, and meaning, The Art of Dying Well is not only about dying. It’s about living intentionally and in community."
—Lucy Kalanithi, MD, FACP, Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Stanford School of Medicine
This is the best guidebook I know of for navigating the later stages of life. Katy Butler’s counsel is simple and practical, but the impact of this book is profound. A remarkable feat.
—Ira Byock, MD, author of Dying Well and The Best Care Possible, and Active Emeritus Professor of Medicine and Community and Family Medicine, the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College
This book is filled with deep knowledge and many interesting experiences. It is a guide for staying as healthy and happy as possible while aging, and [it] also shows how important it is to be medically informed and know our rights in the communities where we live, in order to stay in charge of our lives and therefore less afraid of the future. Katy Butler has written a very honest book. I just wish I had read it ten years ago. You can do it now!
—Margareta Magnusson, author of The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning
"The Art of Dying Well is a guide to just that: how to face the inevitable in an artful way. Katy Butler has clear eyes and speaks plainly about complicated decisions. This book is chock-full of good ideas."
—Sallie Tisdale, author of Advice for Future Corpses
An empowering guide that clearly outlines the steps necessary to avoid a chaotic end in an emergency room and to prepare for a beautiful death without fear.
—Shelf Awareness
Straightforward, well-organized, nondepressing… Free of platitudes, Butler’s voice makes the most intimidating of processes—that of dying—come across as approachable. Her reasonable, down-to-earth tone makes for an effective preparatory guide.
—Publishers Weekly
For all of us boomers who have wondered how we might apply what we learned from the passing of our parents, and make the process smoother—and yes, profound—for our children, here are some really good answers.
—Barbara Peters Smith, Sarasota Herald-Tribune
A brilliant map for living well through old age and getting from the health system what you want and need, while avoiding what you don’t. Armed with this superb book, you can take back control of how you live before you die.
—Diane E. Meier, MD, director, Center to Advance Palliative Care
A much-needed GPS for navigating aging and death… a warm, wise, and straightforward guide, hugely helpful to anyone—everyone—who will go through the complex journey to the end of life.
—Ellen Goodman, founder of The Conversation Project and columnist, The Boston Globe
I wish every one of my patients would read this book—it is like having a wise friend explaining exactly what you need to know about coping with aging or living with a serious illness. It’s not only about dying—it’s about getting what you need from your medical care, including all the insider stuff your doctors and nurses don’t always want to say. We can all learn from Katy Butler—especially doctors—about how to talk to each other more clearly and kindly about decisions that matter.
—Anthony Back, MD, Medical Oncology and Palliative Medicine, and codirector, Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence, the University of Washington
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The Art of Dying Well by Katy Butler, ScribnerTO BRIAN DONOHUE
anam cara
Contents
INTRODUCTION
The Lost Art of Dying
CHAPTER 1
Preparing for a Good End of Life
A Vision for Later Life
Building Reserves
Finding Allies in Preventive Medicine
Practicing Discernment
Getting to Know the Neighbors
Protecting Your Medical Rights
Caring for the Soul
CHAPTER 2
Simplifying Later Life
When Less Is More
Simplifying Daily Life
Finding Allies in Slow Medicine, Geriatrics, and a Good HMO
Reviewing Medications
Reducing Screenings
Making Peace with Loss
CHAPTER 3
Adapting to Change
Mapping the Future and Making Plans
Finding Allies in Occupational and Physical Therapy
Disaster-Proofing Daily Life
Making a Move
Practicing Interdependence
Being an Example
CHAPTER 4
Facing Mortality
Talking to Your Doctor
Understanding the Trajectory of Your Illness
Preparing the Family
Find Allies in Palliative Care
Reflect on What Gives Your Life Meaning
Staying in Charge
Thinking Creatively
Redefining Hope
CHAPTER 5
Coping in the House of Cards
If Only Someone Had Warned Us
Recognizing Frailty
Avoiding the Hospital
Finding Allies in House Call Programs
Upgrading Advance Directives
Dealing with Dementia
Shifting to Comfort Care
Enjoying Your Red Velvet Cake
CHAPTER 6
Getting Ready for a Good Death
Making Good Use of the Time You Have Left
Finding Allies in Hospice
Next Steps
Settling Your Affairs
Choosing the Time of Death
Loving, Thanking, and Forgiving
Getting Help from Your Tribe
CHAPTER 7
Being Supported in Active Dying
This Is What Dying Looks Like
Planning for a Home Death
Improvising in a Nursing Home
Giving Care
The Final Hours
Humanizing a Hospital Death
Creating Rites of Passage
Welcoming Mystery
Saying Goodbye
CONCLUSION
Toward a New Art of Dying
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Glossary
Resources
Notes
Permissions
Index
Author’s Note
This is a work of nonfiction. There are no composite characters, rejiggered timelines, made-up quotes, or invented scenes. When names have been changed, it is disclosed in the notes.
I Worried
I worried a lot. Will the garden grow, will the rivers
flow in the right direction, will the earth turn
as it was taught, and if not how shall
I correct it?
Was I right, was I wrong, will I be forgiven,
can I do better?
Will I ever be able to sing, even the sparrows
can do it and I am, well,
hopeless.
Is my eyesight fading or am I just imagining it,
am I going to get rheumatism,
lockjaw, dementia?
Finally I saw that worrying had come to nothing.
And gave it up. And took my old body
and went out into the morning,
and sang.
—MARY OLIVER
—INTRODUCTION—
The Lost Art of Dying
To our ancestors, death was no secret. They knew what dying looked like. They knew how to sit at a deathbed. They had customs and books to guide them—and a great deal of practice.
Consider, for instance, death’s presence in the lives of my great-great-great-grandparents, Philippa Norman, a household servant, and John Butler, a brush- and bellows-maker. Poor Quakers, they married in Bristol, England, in 1820 and had four children, two of whom died before their second birthdays.
In hopes of starting a new life, the family sailed to New York in 1827. There Philippa gave birth to a stillborn son and later sat at John’s bedside as he died of tuberculosis, now preventable with vaccines and treatable with antibiotics.
Widowed at thirty-six, Philippa sailed back to Bristol, where her daughter Harriet died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-two. Only one of Philippa’s five children—her son Philip—would live long enough to have children of his own. And one of those children, Philip’s favorite daughter Mary, died in 1869 at the age of thirteen when typhoid fever, another preventable illness, swept through her Quaker boarding school.
If you look closely at your own family tree, you will probably discover similar stories.
Most people in wealthy industrial countries now inhabit a changed world, one in which dying has largely been pushed into the upper reaches of the life span. There it awaits us, often in shapes our ancestors would not recognize. To have postponed it so long often means we meet it—as my family did—unprepared.
My father was vigorous until he was seventy-nine. Then one fall morning, he came up from his basement study, put on the kettle, and had a devastating stroke. My mother and I, who would become his caregivers, had little sense of the terrain ahead, and even less familiarity with the bewildering subculture of modern medicine.
The years that followed were a spiritual ordeal that broke me open. I was ambushed by the intensity of my love for my parents and frequently flew across the country to help them. My father and I reawakened the tenderness that had perfused my early childhood, and I wrote him letters of gratitude for all he’d ever done for me. And after he died, my fierce mother, with whom I’d had a passionate and contentious relationship, seized the gift of her own approaching death to apologize to me for minor hurts and to give her blessings for my relationship with my husband-to-be.
In some ways, my parents had good deaths. But our family also suffered unnecessarily during my father’s long decline. We took wrong turns at crossroads, passed up helpful resources, and unwittingly exposed my father to pitfalls that made his last years worse than they had to be. Above all, we were ignorant of medicine’s limits, and the harm it can do when it approaches an aging body in the same way as it does the bodies of the young.
The strongest of my regrets is that two years after his first stroke, my mother and I permitted my father’s doctors to give him a pacemaker, thus extending his life until there was no joy left in the living of it.
He spent his last six and a half years dependent on my exhausted mother, descending step-by-step into deafness, near-blindness, dementia, and misery. Close to the end, my mother and I embarked on a modern rite of passage: asking his doctors to deactivate a medical technology capable of preventing his death without restoring him to a decent life. His doctors refused.
My father finally died quietly, over the course of five days, in a hospice bed, with his pacemaker still ticking. My mother and I had quite consciously decided not to allow his pneumonia (once called the old man’s friend
) to be treated with antibiotics. I was fifty-nine then, and had never before sat at a deathbed. Perhaps it was my great good luck to have been shielded for so long. But it was also my burden. During my father’s last days, I sat alone for hours in that clean but generic hospice room, holding his warm hand, bereft of the habits of the heart,
long practiced by my ancestors, that could have made his dying a more bearable, communal, and sacred rite of passage.
Today, advanced medicine wards off death far better than it helps us prepare for peaceful ones. We feel the loss. Many of us hunger to restore a sense of ceremony, community, dignity, and yes, even beauty, to our final passage. We want more than pain control and a clean bed. We hope to die well.
TOWARD A NEW ART OF DYING
In the mid-1400s, when the Black Death was still fresh in cultural memory, a Catholic monk wrote a bestseller called Ars Moriendi, or The Art of Dying. Written in Latin and illustrated with woodcuts, it taught the dying, and those who loved them, how to navigate the trials of the deathbed. One of the West’s first self-help books, it went through sixty-five editions before 1500 and was translated into all the major languages of Europe.
In its woodcuts, a dying man or woman lies in bed, attended by friends, angels, and sometimes a doctor, servant, or favorite hound. Beneath the bed are demons, urging the dying to give in to one of five temptations
standing in the way of dying in peace. Those were lack of faith, despair, impatience, spiritual pride, and what the monk called avarice
—not wanting to say goodbye to the cherished things and people of the world. These emotions—fear, remorse, wanting to die quickly, and not wanting to die at all—are familiar to most who have sat at a deathbed.
The antidote, counseled the monk, was not to fight bodily death by medical means, but to care for the soul. The dying were invited to confess their regrets to their friends, while attendants recited texts to reassure them of God’s forgiveness and mercy. The dying were then asked to commend their souls
into the hands of God and to relax into a state of grace. The soul, pictured as a tiny human being, would leave the body and fly to heaven in the company of the soul’s angels. Sometimes a roof tile would be loosened to ease its escape.
In the Ars Moriendi, the dying were not passive patients, but the lead actors in their lives’ final, most important drama. Even on their deathbed, even in pain, they had choices and moral agency. Their dying was domestic and communal, as sacred and as familiar as a baptism or a wedding.
Over the next four centuries, Anglicans and other religious groups created their own death manuals modeled on The Art of Dying. The Quakers’ version (Piety Promoted: In Brief Memorials and Dying Expressions of Some of the Society of Friends, Commonly Called Quakers) was still in print in 1828 when my ancestor John Butler died in New York.
In those days, dying happened at home under the care of family and friends. It usually took days or weeks—not years. Children, dogs, and even neighbors gathered at bedsides to say their farewells. Prayers were spoken. A priest might visit. Candles were lit. When death came, the local church bell would toll, informing the entire neighborhood.
After the final breath, relatives or volunteers would wash and dress the body, a tradition once observed in nearly all cultures and religions. In Ireland, a wake, a raucous party blending the holy and the worldly, would be held over the coffin to say goodbye to the dead and to help the living turn back toward life.
Today, church bells no longer toll. In hospitals and nursing homes, the dead are often zipped into body bags and gurneyed out back elevators, as if death itself was a frightening and shameful failure.
The demons under the bed have taken new forms.
Even though more than three-quarters of Americans still hope to die at home, fewer than a third of us do so; the rest die in hospitals, nursing homes, and other institutions. Nearly a third spend time in an intensive care unit in the month before, and 17 percent of Americans die in an ICU.
In antiseptic rooms, hospital protocols replace ancient rites. The dying often can’t say their last words, because they have tubes in their throats. Relatives pace the halls, drinking bad coffee from vending machines, often shocked to hear, in a drab conference room, that someone they love is so close to dying. Nurses and doctors sometimes use the word torture
to describe life in the ICU when someone on the medical team, or in the family, refuses to accept the coming of death. Treatment
often doesn’t stop until someone gathers the courage to say no.
Resistance to our modern, overly medicalized way of death is intensifying in many parts of the United States. Many people yearn to reclaim the power to shape how they (and those they love) die, but aren’t sure how to go about it.
There is a way to a peaceful, empowered death, even in an era of high-technology medicine. It begins long before the final panicked trip to the emergency room. It requires navigating—over years, not days—a medical system poorly structured to meet the needs of aging people, and of anyone coping with a prolonged or incurable illness.
That system pours its money, energy, and time into saving lives, curing the curable, and fixing the fixable. It looks a bit like an assembly line. Each specialist works on a single organ and puts the body back on the conveyor belt. Every year, this fast medicine
track saves countless victims of violence, car accidents, and heart attacks. In a crisis, it works very well.
But when people face a condition that can be managed, but not fixed, the conveyor belt offers more and more procedures that pose greater and greater risks. The body becomes globally fragile. Now, fixing things organ by organ, and assuming that living as long as possible is the only goal, can create obstacles to living well despite imperfect health, and to dying in peace.
Prolonging the life of the body is only one of medicine’s traditional missions. The others are: preventing disease; restoring and preserving function; relieving suffering; and attending the dying. As we age, these quality of life
goals grow in importance. But the conveyor belt, which absorbs the bulk of our insurance dollars, has largely forgotten them. It rewards cure better than care. It does things to people, not for them. It shuttles the sick and fragile from specialist to specialist, and from doctor’s office to emergency room and back again. The older and frailer we get, the wider the gap is likely to grow between the treatments fast medicine offers and the thoughtful, time-consuming gentle, coordinated care we need most.
In the years I’ve spent listening to hundreds of people’s stories of good and difficult declines and deaths, I’ve learned one thing: people who are willing to contemplate their aging, vulnerability, and mortality often live better lives in old age and illness, and experience better deaths, than those who don’t.
They keep shaping lives of comfort, joy, and meaning, even as their bodies decline. They get clear-eyed about the trajectory of their illnesses, so they can plan. They regard their doctors as their consultants, not their bosses. They seek out medical allies who help them thrive, even in the face of disappointment and adversity, and they prepare for a good death. They enroll in hospice earlier, and often feel and function better—and sometimes even live longer—than those who pursue maximum treatment. They make peace with the coming of death, and seize the time to forgive, to apologize, and to thank those they love. They rethink the meaning of hope.
And they often die with less physical suffering, and just as much attention to the sacred, as our ancestors did.
But those who give up their power, hoping only to postpone death and never facing where things are heading, often ride the conveyor belt to its ultimate destination: a high-tech hospital room. And that is where they die.
This is not what most of us want. A 2017 poll, asking people to think about the ends of their lives, found that only one-quarter of us want to live as long as possible, no matter what. The rest care more about the quality of our lives and deaths: not burdening our families, being at peace spiritually, dying at home, and dying comfortably. If you are among those three-quarters, this book is for you. It is intended to help you remain your life’s lead actor from the first inklings of vulnerability, all the way to the end. It can be done.
After I wrote a memoir about our family’s experience called Knocking on Heaven’s Door, I heard from more than a thousand people who’d shepherded those they loved through the often-attenuated process of modern dying. From them I learned that with preparation, support, and guidance, it was possible to get on to a pathway leading to a better end of life. In the past three years, I’ve interviewed hundreds of people about good and difficult deaths they’ve witnessed, along with leading experts in geriatrics, oncology, palliative care, hospice, and related fields. I have distilled what I learned to help you and those you love successfully navigate the complex landscape of aging, serious illness, and death in an era of advanced medicine.
I hope this book will help you get the best of what your health systems offer and help you grasp the opportunities for meaning, love, and redemption that many of us have found. I also wrote it, in part, to guide myself. This year I turned seventy, and there is no denying that somewhere beyond the horizon, my own death has saddled his horse and is heading my way.
I don’t have all the answers. But I have learned this much.
There is a movement afoot, dedicated to restoring meaning and dignity to the end of our lives. It shows up in quiet family talks around kitchen tables, in meetings of Death Cafes and Death Over Dinner groups, and in bestselling books such as Atul Gawande’s Being Mortal. Each kitchen-table conversation, each new book, and each meeting of virtual strangers is softening the shame, denial, and secrecy that has, over the past century, made us more terrified of death, and more unequipped for it, than we need to be. Within health care, reforms are underway, thanks to emotionally intelligent oncologists, emergency room and critical care doctors, ICU and hospice nurses, and others in primary care, geriatrics, occupational and physical therapy, palliative care, and hospice. All can help you live well long before you die well. This book will, I hope, help you find your way to them.
HOW THIS BOOK IS ORGANIZED
This is a step-by-step guide to remaining as functional and as happy as possible, and as informed and unafraid, through the health stages most of us will traverse (sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly) as time grows finite.
Each chapter is dedicated to helpful actions you can take to recognize, accept, and respond effectively to each health stage: Preparing for a Good End of Life while still vigorous; Simplifying Later Life as energy fades; Adapting to Change and disability; Facing Mortality and terminal