When I think of my mother's last two years, I see a cascading series of physical breakdowns, all of them treatable, yet treatment had side effects which caused other problems. There was no "fatal" diagnosis, just age. Yet, I wonder, is there a natural way to die? Is there anything I can do to prepare better for old age and eventual death, myself? I know the Healthcare Directive may help. But our science is still so far from being able to support our spiritual transition.
Over the last 35years I've noticed a change in the medical world and in society as well. More of an emphasis now on quality of life over banishment of death at all costs. More of an understanding that death is an inevitable part of the human experience.
The questions we now have to ask ourselves are "when do we want to die naturally" and do we have the courage to say "No" to modern medicine and the attempts to banish death.
Science will never be able to support our spiritual transition or answer the above questions. The transition and the answers are unique and deeply personal to each individual.
I knew an 85 year old lady that took many medications for multiple conditions but had good quality of life. Then she noticed her eyesight was failing and the doctor found macular degeneration. He told her she would be blind by the end of the year. "I will NOT live being blind.", she said. That was where she drew the line. In a most heroic away, this lady decided to stop taking all the medications that we're keeping her alive and "let nature take its course." She died 5 months later, but she never had to suffer with being blind and had her sight until the day she died. In my book, that took guts. And, to me, that's dying naturally.
I visited yesterday (Tuesday) and the deterioration in just a few days was terrible. She didn't know me, wouldn't open her eyes and, much as staff tried, she would not even sip a little liquid. She's close to 90 and is in no pain. Her body is just shutting down and I expect she will pass within a few days. In my view her death is "natural" ... the body just can't go any further.
I read a lot of mysteries -- two or three books a week for many years! That's a lot! And in that fictional genre, an "unnatural" death would be murder, manslaughter (etc.) or suicide. Dying of cancer, with or without extraordinary treatment is "natural" and does not require investigation. A person who dies of "natural causes" isn't typically the subject of a mystery book, unless someone suspects the natural causes had a little deliberate help.
I hope this isn't coming across as making light of a serious subject. But "natural" is only a word invented by humans, and it means what we agree it means. Sometimes that isn't exactly well-defined!
I've mentioned before that my father died on the waiting list for coronary bypass surgery. At the time we were outraged and heartbroken as he was 'only' 75. As I watch my mother's decline 20 years later I now see his death as a good one that saved him from the kind of suffering inherent with incredible old age.