Monday, May 2, 2016

Do Not Resuscitate - choices you have to make

I was told that my mother had a Do Not Resuscitate order on her. Several problems affected my family later - and still do.

1 The decision (or veto or casting vote) goes to the spouse. My father, mother’s spouse, had the next of kin vote. As a daughter I had none. 

2 For a widow (or widower) the vote goes to the child, not the grandchild. In a similar disagreement, when another member of my family died, her son had the 'let her die' vote, but the grandson was upset because he wanted her to live.

3 It may not be clear to the family that the 'do not resuscitate' means something will happen and your relative will die within a few hours. Do not go away! I assumed that my parent (mother) might live another week. I would not have left hospital if I had realised she would be dead within a couple of hours. First I would not have left her alone (and at the mercy of staff). Second I would not have taken two stressful journeys to and from hospital (four trips in all, there, bad, there, back. Nor would I have made the double journey for my 89 year old father). 

4 If a patient has nil by mouth they will die of dehydration and have no relief for a dry mouth and their tongue will swell up so it’s hard to breath and impossible to talk. 

5 We left my dying mother because my 89 year old father needed to go home to eat and sit down. Provision should be made for an elderly spouse or next of kin or child to order food to be brought to them. If a charge is made, that would be better than sending them off to a canteen and coming back to find dear Mum has died alone. 

6 Leaving your family member to die alone leads to dreadful guilt trips. The spouse or child thinks either 
a) My relative died because I left and they were all alone and felt abandoned. 
b) While I was away the nursing staff gave them an injection which killed them.

7 Second thoughts. What if you change your mind? Maybe before making a decision you should be given a checklist. This could include:
What would they decide if it had been me?

I thought about it. My mother would never have let me die.
 She would always have wanted to keep me alive for another, day, another round of staff, a second opinion, a different treatment, a chance of a recover, a postponement of the overwhelming grief.

Afterwards my neighbour who was a nurse asked me: was the blood red or brown? I did not know. I should have taken photographs. That might have told me whether my mother had a chance of survival. And the cause of her vomiting blood.

Sorry to be so gruesome, but you do need to deal with these matters. Birth and death may involve blood. You need to know when loss of blood is survivable and when it isn't. If it isn't, you might not want to go away.You need to know the options to make a decision you won't regret, the right decision, for your loved one and yourself.

Angela Lansbury, author and speaker.









Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Queen Mother's Funeral Poem She is gone by David Harkins

I went to the 'service of celebration for the life of Andrew Eslick Floyd (25 Feb 1951-21 March 2015) on Friday 17 April and the order of service included the poem He is gone by David Harkins.

Who is David Harkins, I wondered. I looked him up on the internet and discovered the story of his poem. It was read at the funeral of HM The Queen Mother, after which various people tried to track down the author.

The author is David Harkins, a painter in the Lake District, who had made several attempts at establishing himself as a writer, with little success. The poem was not written for a funeral but an expression of unrequited love for a girl he met before he married his wife who now poses for his paintings of nudes.

So for David Harkins, fame at last.

The poem is adapted for funerals by changing he to she, like this

He is Gone

You can shed tears that he is gone
Or you can smile because he has lived

You can close your eyes and pray that he will come back
Or you can open your eyes and see all that he has left
....
You can remember him and only that he is gone
or you can cherish his memory and let it live on.

You can cry and close your mind, be empty and turn your back
Or you can do what he would want: smile, open your eyes, love and go on.
***
See poeticexpressions.co.uk

Angela Lansbury B A Hons, author of:
Quick Quotations

Verses and inscriptions for gravestones, funeral announcements, services, and thank you notes

Always remembered
Cherished memories of
Happy memories of
In affectionate memory of
In ever loving memory of
In loving memory of
Loving memories of
Precious memories of
Sacred to the memory of
Treasured Memories of

You might feel that a classical rhyme expresses perfectly your feelings.

Cease your weeping and your sorrow
Do not think of them as dead
They have reached their home in heaven
Cares and pains forever fled.

'tis better to have loved and lost
Than never to have loved at all

God sees when footsteps falter
When the pathway has grown too steep
So he touches the dropping eyelids
And gives the loved one sleep.
If tears could build a stairway
And memories a lane
We'd walk right up to heaven
And bring you home gain.

In the arms of the angels is where
Our daughter (son, mother etc) lays, a
Beautiful person in thousands of ways.

In the garden of happy memories
It is always summer.

Love's last gift
Remembrance.

My favourite place in all the world,
Let me think where that could be ...
.. Well any place you care to name
As long as you're with me.

Not 'til the loom is silent
And the shuttles cease to fly
Shall God unroll his canvas
And explain the reason why
For the dark threads are as needed
In the pattern he has planned
As the threads of gold and silver
In his almighty hand.
(Anon/unknown/B M Franklin)

Pause my family as you walk by
Where you are now, so was I
Where I am now, you will be
Prepare my family
To follow me.

Softly the leaves of memory fall
Gently, I gather and treasure them all.

Sunshine passes, shadows fall
Love and memory outlast them all.

This is not goodbye, just time to
rest your head. The moon will be your
Pillow, the stars above your bed. Sweet dreams
Forever, and do not fear, you will be
Remembered for precious times shared here.


What seems to us a sunset
Is sunrise in another land.

You shared my dreams for the future
You shared my past
You were my first love
You are my last.

You could use the words at the end of a well known rhyme to help write your own verse. You might like to use the person's name if it has a meaning (for example, Pearl was a pearl), or if it rhymes with another suitable word.

You can find more in the literature from funeral directors and printers and books of quotations, and the announcements in local and national newspapers.

On a lighter note, the Victorian humorous inscription which always runs through my head is:
He was right, dead right, as he sped along
But he's just as dead as if he were wrong.

My other favourite is:
Old Martha Snell has gone away
She would if she could but she couldn't stay
She had two sore legs and a baddish cough
But it was her legs that carried her off.

Cemeteries nowadays tend to censor anything which sounds irreverent, but when printing your own notices you can choose whatever you like, if you think it will relieve the gloom and make people feel happier.

Let us end on a cheerful note: Comedian Spike Milligan's gravestone inscription which he chose for himself  was not allowed by the authorities - so the family inscribed it in Gaelic:

I told you I was ill.

Post written by
Angela Lansbury BA Hons, author of: Quick Quotations; Who Said What When.

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Souvenir Hair: from the dead, the living parent/widow, and yourself

My regret is that I did not cut a big lock of white hair from my mother-in-law while she was still alive and healthy. I don't really like the idea of hair taken from a dead body, maybe carrying cancer or sweat or decay.

I asked the undertakers for a hair from 'aunty'. I was disappointed to receive a tiny piece of hair, just a few strands in a tiny plastic bag inside an envelope.

I was hoping for a piece the size of a ponytail. Aunty had flowing white hair.

I have kept hair from my father, uncle and 'aunty'. I was able to get hair from the undertakers for my uncle and aunty.

I didn't see my father's dead body. I wonder whether I cut off my father's hair while he was alive without him noticing.  If you have a pair of nail scissors, you can snip off a tiny amount of hair.

Why save hair?
a) Sentimental reasons - the Victorians used to save locks of hair in lockets and rings.

b) Part of the same reason - collecting and saving everything you can of the body and life of your loved one or ancestor, because it is part of them and part of your history. The same feeling makes us want to bury a body and mark a grave, keep a photo and hold a memorial service, even if we don't believe in a resurrection.

c) For forensics - evidence in case of any later case, brought by us or others, suggesting that a doctor, care home, hospital, even the food or water supply, could have poisoned or damaged or weakened the health of the elderly or (or both staff and patients) or all citizens.

d) For health research - if we later discover or want to research anything from viruses to flu to diet, to see what affected the person. It could be in our lifetime to benefit us and our children. Or centuries later to solve mysteries and help historians. Did the Romans die of lead pipes damaging their water supply? Was Napoleon poisoned or did he die of fumes from the buildings paint? Was your ancestor really a victim or can you prove you are a descendant and stand to inherit?

e) To involve your descendants (grandchildren) in your affection for the ancestors not met (your parents, uncles and aunts, grandparents, in-laws).

f) To prove that granny really was a redhead, or that family members resemble each other.

g) To show you are not being sentimental, but the hair really was white, silver, ginger, blonde, brown black.

h) To show grandchildren that they are like their now deceased grandparents.

i) It would be good to have locks of your parents or your own hair at different ages, to show your hair in your youth and middle age and old age. Even to show a hairdresser.

If you are interested in my posts, please follow or forward or read my other blogs.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Tell Us Once (handy, time-saving government agencies' website records deaths)

Very useful service from the government, called Tell us Once.
Go on to
www.gov.uk

You are given a number by the registrar of deaths and can then fill in the forms. This notifies several organisations - you can see from the website. Cancels driving license, passport, pensions etc.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Funeral Photos & Speech Videos

One of my regrets is not getting still photos of the people who attended the funeral and lunch reception for 'aunty'.

After my uncle's funeral, I was the executor in charge and I gathered the mourners into a group and took a photograph because two of them were members of his professional union who I did not know and I wanted a record of them as they were going back to work and not attending the tea afterwards.

However, at Aunty's, I was busy photographing the flower display, saying goodbye to a larger number of well-wishers, and organising cars (as well as arranging to stop at an en route supermarket for extra nibbles - nuts, and decaff coffee).

It seemed an interruption to take photos at the service and after it was over the mourners were ushered out to form a reception line. At the exit door I was in the line, kissing and shaking hands and hugging and nodding and thanking, and not able to take photos.

I managed to pass my phone to the person next to me before I went to the lectern to make the speech. I wanted a video record of the speech. But had no time to ask anybody to take still photo of myself giving the speech.

Our family's best photographer was a chief mourner, son of the deceased, and not inclined to take photos.

At the reception I was busy running around speaking, listening, moving chairs, providing tea. We had not thought it worthwhile to pay for anybody to do the catering. But in the event being busy with the catering was a full time job with me acting as hostess and I was too busy to think of photos.

The moral is, if you want a photo of the occasion, ask the funeral director if somebody can discreetly take a photo of those giving speeches, and of the family in the front row, the casket, the flower display. And ask the caterers or somebody else in advance to take photos of the visiting family who you might not see again. Your nearest and dearest might be dressed up in suits when you normally have your scruffy kids in crumpled tee-shirts.  It's your one chance to show your family looking well dressed, co-operating with each other and paying respects to your beloved relative.

I know that relatives overseas who were unable to attend would have been interested in both videos and still photos. Even friends from Toastmasters International have asked to see the video of my funeral speech.

Relatives who were about to take holiday to celebrate a birthday had to cancel their trip in order to come to the funeral. Sometimes it is good to get away and taken photos of yourself in new surroundings. On a happier note, you might like to read some of the travel posts on my travel blog.

Angela Lansbury, travel writer, author, speaker.
More by and about Angela Lansbury, including speeches, on Angela Lansbury author blogs, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn.

Funeral flowers: your choice: Mum, Dad, Granddad, Nan, star, Sikh

For a funeral you might choose horizontal casket top displays, vertical vases, displays both sides of a shelf or table or altar centrepiece, and displays on a stand next to the reader or celebrant or speech-giver.


We were very pleased with our flower arrangement.

Casket display.



You can order hearts, woodland (green leaf rather than flowers), the words Mum, Dad, double heart. rings, palm sheafs, white roses, Aum Hindu tribute, Khanda Sikh symbol and more.

My Last Goodbye

www.mylastgoodbye.co.uk
info@mylastgoodbye.co.uk
Unit 2G MS Business Centre
22 Chapel Lane, Pinner, Middx HA5 1A2
tel:0208 0900 805.

You can see their range on their website. You can also have a six point star.


We had everything organised by:
Hearnden-Smith & Daughters
Funeral Directors,

Hatch End Branch
274 Uxbridge Road
Hatch End, Pinner
Middlesex HA5 4HS
Tel: 020 8421 2202

Harefield Branch
3 School Parade
High Street
Harefield
Middlesex UB9 6BT
Tel: 01895 822979

St Albans Tel:07813 766716.

They have the catalogue from the above flower supplier.

Angela Lansbury, author and speaker.