Uncategorized

How My Parents’ Death Changed My Thinking About End-Of-Life Care

My sister and I took our positions in the funeral home’s family room and greeted hundreds of mourners who had come to pay their respects. Everything seemed as it had four months earlier at our mother’s funeral. The ubiquitous tissue boxes. My navy pinstriped suit. The ripped black ribbon, a Jewish tradition, affixed to my lapel.

But this time, we were accepting condolences after the death of our dad, who stood next to us such a short time before.

It’s hard enough to lose one parent. Losing two within months is incomprehensible. When I left my parents’ Michigan apartment last month, I couldn’t believe it would be for the last time. I’ve replayed phone messages so that I could hear their voices again. And each morning, I look at Dad’s watch on my wrist, thinking it should be on his.

Two days before my dad died, I celebrated the first Mother’s Day without my mom. Now, I’m marking the first Father’s Day without my dad.

As I’ve mourned my parents, I’ve been struck by how many stories I’ve heard about husbands and wives dying soon after their spouses. One of my high school teachers lost both parents within a year; so did a journalist friend in Los Angeles. My rabbi told me his parents died only months apart.

My mom buried both of her parents within the same week in April 1979, when I was 5. My zaydee died first, unable to fathom life without his wife, who lay dying in the hospital. My bubbe died during his funeral two days later.

I wondered whether there was more to this than coincidence, and sure enough, there’s a well-documented “widowhood effect.” Those who lose a spouse are about 40 percent more likely to die within six months than those with living spouses. The effect has been found in a host of countries, across a range of ages, in widows and in widowers – though men are more likely to die soon after losing spouses than women are.

S.V. Subramanian, a professor of population health and geography at Harvard University, co-wrote a review published in 2011 that looked at more than a dozen studies on the effect. “We never say that grief is a disease,” he told me. “But what some of this research is showing is that at older ages, grief can make you more vulnerable to mortality.”

Subramanian said his uncle’s parents died within days of one another.

There are a variety of theories about why this happens. Perhaps it’s the emotional toll – the grief that accompanies a broken heart. Perhaps there’s a practical explanation – a wife or husband may have provided support in the form of reminders to take medication. Perhaps it’s that a surviving spouse may be less active and feel less of a sense of responsibility after a partner is gone, contributing to a decline in health.

For my dad, in subtle and not-so-subtle ways, his heartbreak was evident from the start. I’d never seen him cry as he did in the minutes after we disconnected the ventilator keeping my mother alive back in January. He typically kept his emotions well contained, and it was agonizing to watch him overcome by grief.

“My sweet, sweet wife of 42 1/2 years has just passed,” he wrote on Facebook hours later. “She was a wonderful wife, mother, and grandma. There is a hole in my heart.”

Then he stopped talking about it. He changed topics when my sister and I asked how he was coping. Instead, he talked of moving to the Jewish senior apartments, going on a dialysis cruise, starting a new business, visiting our family in New Jersey.

My dad’s health problems may have caught up with him even if my mom hadn’t died. He had heart disease, diabetes, renal failure and congestive heart failure. Last summer, his heart stopped and he had to be on a ventilator, but he pulled through.

Whether by coincidence or not, his health began to slide further after my mom’s death. He fell in the bathroom and cut his foot, a problem for diabetics like him. When the toes didn’t heal properly, he had to have them amputated.

He joked that he and his toes had had a good run and wondered if the toe fairy would come for a visit.

My father maintained his humor even on the morning of his death. When my sister called to ask him, “Who’s the best dad in the world?” he responded, “I don’t know, but when you find him, can you have him give me a call so I can get some pointers?”

I can’t help but think about the pain behind that facade – how much he missed my mom, the woman he shared his life with and relied on for more than four decades.

In the end, I was relieved that my sister and I didn’t have to decide whether to disconnect life support, a decision that caused so much anguish and pain in my mom’s final days. My dad died quickly: He went into cardiac arrest and could not be revived. He was 68.

There’s some solace in the idea that my parents are together again. But that doesn’t make this Father’s Day any easier.

I’ll cherish the time with my wife and kids. We’ll probably go for bagels, as we do every weekend, and maybe we’ll head to the Jersey Shore. I wish that I could share the day’s highlights with my dad. I want to tell him that his 6-year-old grandson has learned how to play checkers (and is actually decent) and that our 3-year-old is building symmetrical Lego spaceships. I want him to know that the baby boy my wife is expecting in November seems to be doing well.

Could I have made more of my time with my parents? Will my children remember them? How I can live a life worthy of their legacy? If I can be as kind and generous a parent as they were, that will be a start.

Charlie wrote about his mother’s death, and how it changed his thinking about end-of-life care, in February.

Charles Ornstein is a senior reporter at ProPublica, where this post originally appeared.

9 replies »

  1. I am very touched by your words. I can’t believe you have to deal with so much stress in so little time. Losing a mother and a father is so little time is a devastating tragedy that may affect your health, performance at work or even peace at home. You summarized pretty well many stories of many grief experiences I have heard during my lifetime. However, having to deal with two episodes of deep sorrow in a short time creates a hole in the heart and deep pain in the soul. It seems you have raised a good family with proper values. And that is all what matters for the ones that are no longer with us. Always take a deep breath and take care of the ones that are close to you.

  2. The sad thing about all of these posts is there are none from an RN. As a seasoned RN 30 YEARS + I ask of families what you ask us to do? I have never worked Med/Surg always Critical Care and ER. I cry and I mourn these patients that I looked after for 1 or maybe 72 hours lingering and in pain.Be brave and give them dignity,

  3. I am extremely touched by your article. You know life tends to move so fast, and unless we step back and reflect; most times we fail to consider that our parents will not be with us forever. And when they are gone, will our children remember them anyway? Life is short and therefore, we need to make the best of it always. Thanks for this article.

  4. The opposite of this story of two parents dying close together is the even more difficult-to-watch struggle when one parent dies and the other soldiers on, sometimes for years on end, needing to regroup life as he/she knew it. Their grief is deep and frequently overwhelming: they need to reconstruct life without their partner. It is one of the hardest tasks there is.

    In addition, having one parent survive a long time after the first is equally hard for surviving family members to watch–just different.. As a Healthcare Liaison, I have seen clients that do go on and marry again, but most remain single, and their care needs shift to their adult children. The families that seem most able to manage this successfully have a wide network of friends and supports, both emotional and spirtiualy, to see them through.

  5. I was very touched by your telling of your parents situation and passing. I do agree that feelings of grief and loss can be powerful enough to cause the “widowhood effect” and have witnessed an aspect of it myself with my great uncle. His health was failing and different from your father’s situation my great uncle had purposely stopped taking his medications due to having lost the will to live without his wife for any longer which directly lead to his passing. More time and research must be invested into educating patients, spouses, family members, and friends regarding end of life care and the emotional distress that comes with a loved one passing in hope that grief and the “widowhood effect” can be lessened for all of those involved.

  6. I certainly believe grief played the major role in your dad’s death. Yes, he did have other health problems but science shows that health is directly related to a person’s mental state. Sorry for your loses.

  7. I know exactly how you feel, Charlie – my parents died 29 days apart just over ten years ago. Complicated by the fact that dad died days before Thanksgiving, and mom’s death days before Christmas. Of course, as a comedy writer, I did not stifle myself when we were in the same funeral home, with the same funeral director, from asking, “Fred, it’s been less than thirty days – do we get a volume discount?” Every family has its coping strategies – ours is laughter.

    After advocating for them, and managing their care through end of life, I’ll say the whole process, painful as it was, was a gift. I’m so very sorry that your kids won’t know their granddad as the mensch he obviously was. It’s now up to you to model mensch-hood for them – this post proves you’re more than equal to the task.

  8. This is touching, thank you for sharing. You are blessed to have had two special parents. Too many are not so fortunate.