Three middle aged women sat at a table in a small cafe
enjoying their monthly 'ladies who lunch' occasion. They had been doing this for ten years and
they were a close knit group.
" You know,
Rachel still goes and visits her mom every day.
Can you believe that?" said
Debbie.
"Her mom???
Rachel is 80! You mean she goes
to the cemetery?" Edith said
"No, she visits her mom. Her mom is 102!" Debbie said
"Oh isn't that wonderful! She must be so happy to still have her
mother." Edith said sadly. She had lost her mother 5 years ago and the pain of missing her was
with her every day.
"Ugh! I can't
imagine living that long. No
thanks" thought Grace. But when the table fell silent she realized
she had said it out loud. That had been
happening a lot lately.
"What?" she
said
"Grace, are you okay?? " Debbie , a self proclaimed nurturer, looked
at Grace with her best "I'm here for you" face. She put her hand on Grace's.
"Of course I'm okay!" said Grace feeling uncomfortable at being the
focus of the attention at the table.
"Why wouldn't I be?"
"Well you just basically said you don't want to live
that long...." said Edith who was
more focused on her lunch than on what was going on.
"I don't! Do you
all want to live to be that old?"
she was incredulous every time she heard someone talk like this.
"Are you suicidal Grace, do you need to talk?" Debbie was starting to irritate Grace.
"Oh for heaven's sake, Debbie. I am not suicidal. I love my life. I just don't want to live to be a decrepit
old woman waiting to die. Who wants
that? I don't understand people who want
to add years to their life when those added years will be as a very old
person. No thanks. I want to go out
while I am still fully functional. In
fact, I could go anytime now, and that would be fine with me." Grace took a sip of her wine and hoped they
would let it drop now.
"So, you're saying if you got hit by a bus on your way
home today, we could know that you died happy?" asked Edith between bits of her lasagna.
Grace thought about it and wondered how she could make her
friends understand her point of view.
"Okay look. I
have done everything I am supposed to in my life. Got an education, then a career and then got
married, had kids and now I have grand kids.
What more is there for me to do? I don't want to travel, I don't have a
husband anymore to grow old with. My
health isn't great and I can't imagine how i will be ten or twenty years from
now. I guess what I am saying is 'quit
while you're ahead'. Wouldn't it be nice
to be able to check out of this life whenever you choose? Avoid all of the
decline that comes with aging?"
Edith, who was 10 years older than Grace, stopped eating and
looked at her.
"I'm 68 years old, Grace, and I have so much I still
want to do. I feel like I have only
begun my life now that I am retired.
I've never felt better than I do now."
Grace found it hard to believe that Edith had never felt better. What about when she was young? But she didn't say anything.
"Well Edith, that's good for you then. You are very lucky. I'm not saying everyone should feel like I
do, I am just saying how I feel. "
she looked at Debbie "How is Rachel's mother? Does she still live alone, does she have all
her faculties? Does she enjoy her life?
"
Debbie was thoughtful for a minute or so.
"Well.....she is in a home. And she's blind and in a wheelchair. But Rachel says she is always cheerful when
she come to visit her. She seems to know
who Rachel is and they have good visits."
Grace thought about that.
How could she be happy living like that?
Being blind would be especially
hard. Not being able to read or play on
her computer, or paint or any of the things she liked to do. And since she was diabetic she knew that
blindness was a very real possibility for her down the road.
"What about your family? Your grandkids? Wouldn't they miss you?" asked Edith.
"My children are busy with their own lives. They don't have time for me...." she put her hand up to stop Debbie from interrupting
"...it's okay Debbie, I am not feeling sorry myself. It's a fact of life, that when your kids grow
up they don't need you anymore. It's as it should be. I didn't need my mother after I got
married. It was nice to have her, don't
get me wrong, but she wasn't a big part of my life."
Grace's mother had died in her sleep two years ago. She had been healthy and active. It had been a terrible blow to her. Her mother had been 75 years old. Never sick a day in her life. But what a blessed way to go.
"Think of it this way.
Do you really want to become a burden on your family? Do you want them to watch you decline year
after year? Do you really want to rot
away in a nursing home and have people come visit you as a duty or as a volunteer
job? Do you want to drain the health care system for years with all of the
various illness the elderly are prone to?
I don't. I want to live each day
to the fullest. I want to wake up every
day grateful for the gift of a new day.
I want to have fun. And....I am ready to die. I want it to be quick. And I want it to be either in my sleep or
doing something crazy like bungee jumping or skydiving. That's how I feel. "
Grace knew she would never bungee jump or skydive but she thought that
throwing that in would dispel any ideas of her being suicidal.
"I can't believe you are being so negative and so
selfish, Grace." said Debbie, her
eyes filling with tears.
"I don't see it that way Deb. " She grabbed her hand. "I am not going to die any minute,
silly. I am taking good care of myself
so that the time I am here is good. But
I mean it when I say I am done. Not sad,
not depressed, just done." And
with that she stood up, hugged her friends , left some money for her share of
the bill and said "I have to go now.
I have to go to my salsa dancing class. It's been a slice."
There was no salsa dancing class. She was going home to curl up on the couch
and read. But her friends didn't know
that.
Edith and Debbie silently watched her leave.
"Poor Grace, " said Debbie, sadly "we really
need to be there for her, Edith and help her through this suicidal
depression."
Edith was thoughtful for a moment.
"Maybe I am as crazy as Grace, because I think she
makes a lot of sense".