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Ponderizations of a Crazy Calvinist
Blagging for England from the persecuted church

Thursday, August 05, 2004
Not to be Morbid.  But we've all got to die.  We will all lose loved ones at some point.   I often reflect on Psalm 23 Vs 4

Hebrews 9
27Just as man is destined to die once, and after that to face judgment,



4Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,[3]
   I will fear no evil,
for you are with me;
   your rod and your staff,
   they comfort me.

I think its also true to say,  that many people have a real sense of death.  They may not be classed as terminally ill,  yet need pallative (sp)care.  There is no cure,  but the desease will be constant and progressive.  And  have spoken with Christian friends, about how those terminally ill,  perhaps with the most dreaded of disease,  (Cancer the big one) will seek illegal means of relief.  Self-murder, and often implicate their loved ones in the crime, and go under the name of Mercy Killing or Euthansia.  And  yet, many in the palliative care syndrome, may have ten or twenty years with similar levels of pain.  It takes its toll,  yet maybe going on the below,  it loosens the fear of  going from this world to the next.   A Christian should not be afraid to die.  We all know it happens to each of us.  But when looking down the end of a double barrelled shot gun,   it stirs all kinds of emotions.  Fear maybe not the main one.  Fear of living like "this" is a big one.  That this is all there is and ever will be.   And will you last the distance, and  bring Glory to God's name.  And when the time comes,  will you die well.  And in a God-honouring way.   None of us knows the answer.  But these questions,  are forever there,  forever knocking.  Satan loves to mock one with them.   And another day  wasted in a river of tears.


Fear of Death

Q: How does fear of death effect pain at the end of life?

A: Pain at the end of life is inescapably interwoven with, and often amplified by, multiple levels of emotional and spiritual angst as the inevitability of death looms. Fear, a potent pain magnifier, is the dominant emotion - fear of pain, fear of death, fear of the unknown.

It is commonly believed that people at the end of life fear pain even more than they fear death. Sadly, for many dying patients, pain seems like the ultimate torment, and death is its cure. It does not have to be this way, and if you or a loved one is facing death, you have every right to ask that your final days not be consumed by pain.

Fear is just one of the powerful emotions in the mix. Dying patients are often prey to a host of anxieties about the state of their affairs, about the fate of those who will grieve their loss, and about how their behavior will be seen, and possibly judged, during their final hours. And of course, there are often deep spiritual and religious questions to address. Did my life have meaning? Will my soul survive my body? Am I at peace with myself, my family, and my friends?

Not least of all these concerns, people at the end of life worry about how their pain will be managed. Will they be under medicated and have to ask, or even beg for relief? Will they be overmedicated and lose consciousness during their precious waning days and hours?

They may even be afraid to complain. If they do, will they be seen as whiners or quitters? If they ask for narcotics, will they be judged by their doctors as drug seeking, or even cowardly? Or will their medical care be relegated to comfort measures only, while all efforts to cure their illness are suspended?

One of the most universal fears is dying alone or being emotionally abandoned. Whether from a feeling of helplessness or aversion, caregivers may spend less time with someone who is dying or neglect to offer simple human comfort, like holding someone's hand or sitting with them for a moment. Dying patients who sense reluctance and avoidance feel abandoned and rejected. The cloud of imminent death casts a shadow of abandonment at a time when a person needs to feel connected and loved.

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8/05/2004 02:30:00 am :: ::
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