What does dying feel like?
For a while, now, I have been looking for someone to tell me what dying feels like. Tricky topic, I know, all the best witnesses being dead. Silly thing to do, friends have told me, don’t waste your time.
Dr Geoffrey Garret, onetime senior Home Office pathologist, tells us what dying looks like:
Life has a genuine presence that you can only really feel as it moves from a body. That is the sole time it shows itself, through its sudden absence. Though you cannot touch it, see it or hear it … life is nonetheless something one can feel, like electricity.
It is also true to say that one does not have to be physically close to sense the microsecond when it moves on.
You’d think that hospice nurses and care home staff would have some idea what dying feels like, having watched over so many departures. You’d think that one or two might have done it themselves, vicariously.
I was about to start researching this when along comes a pretty good answer in the shape of a new book by Peter and Elizabeth Fenwick, The Art of Dying. Dr Fenwick is a neurophysiologist, not a new age nutter. Difficult to roll the eyes and dismiss him out of hand.
The Fenwicks talk about ELEs – end of life experiences – when dying people become aware of the presence of friendly dead people who have come to receive them and guide them on their way. At the moment of death, a dying person will often gaze fixedly and with great joy.
They conclude that “a mechanistic view of brain function is inadequate to explain these transcendent experiences.” They refute any claim that these are drug induced experiences in dying people on the grounds that drugs give rise to altogether more psychedelic hallucinations.
The Fenwicks talk about the experiences of people miles away from a dying person who become aware of their death at the precise time it happens.
They talk about how some of the living have a continuing sense of the presence of a dead person.
They're especially interesting about NDEs – near death experiences – especially those they term TDEs – temporary death experiences. Some survivors of cardiac arrest, brought back by CPR, experience the classic near death experience even though they are technically dead. The Fenwicks conclude: “From the point of view of science, TDEs cannot occur during unconsciousness, and yet there is some tantalising evidence that this is just when they do seem to occur.”
They conclude that consciousness may not be limited to the brain, and that, given the lovely time people have dying, “a greater understanding of what happens when we die would lead to a removal of our fear of death and open up the possibility of a new beginning, the start of a new journey.”
It’s all very intriguing and, as the Fenwicks say, worth researching further. They don’t claim to have the answer, but they are sceptical of the capability of reductionist medical science to crack the mystery.
It’s a book well worth reading. Rush out and buy it. And I’m looking forward to another, when it comes off the presses in a few days’ time. It is Gentle Dying by Felicity Warner, who heads up the
My neighbour’s house was repossessed yesterday. All her things are still in it. We don’t know where she is now. I rang the estate agent who, it turns out, traffics in this sort of misery daily, and, no, she doesn’t think about the feelings of the people this has happened to. If continuation of consciousness means more of the same shittiness of human nature, I’m very happy to buy into the idea of dying contentably. After that, though, please: lights out.
Labels: dying
2 Comments:
D'you know Charles - I've sat beside countless dying people while they are leading up to the great (?) event and have watched several of them do it.
I know loads about dead bodies, but the actual doing of it is a total mystery to me.....
What do you think? Are we who study on the margins of death's door looking for the illusive key.
I think so - but I don't think we will get a copy of it till it's our time - thinking more, I recon it's a keypad, and when our 'number's up' we get to punch it in as our code and go through!!!
I have stage IV Mcrc, obviously terminal. At the onset I had a near death experience, the result of a tumor perforating the colon and my not being interested in going to the hospital. (of course, at the time, I had no idea why I felt bad, and hurt like hell, so I thought it would just pass) Well, a point came wherein the pain subsided and I became aware that I was approaching death. Remarkably I had no interest in getting up and going for help. From my experience, which I will not fully detail here, it was the most peaceful, comforting experience of my life. Finally my intellect kicked in, and realized that my wife and son might not appreciate my being dead in the chair when they came home. At great effort, I made it to the ER. A couple of hours later, it would have been over.
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