Terri Schiavo - The Real Story
LarryC
1,267 Posts
If you know the real story, the real truth of the matter, please post here. In other words, if you have been involved intimately with the situation for the past 15+ years and were closely involved in the events leading up to Terri's condition, then your opinion will be valued here. I would take time to listen to what you have to say rather than an opinion formed and fed from sensational media and cheap journalism.
Anyone?
Anyone?
Comments
But on a little more serious note. I have read some news articles about those family members who are going through the same thing. The common thread seems to be resentment at the media and demonstrators. They all fell it is a personal decision that should not be scutinized by the general public!!!
Jayne can't make it into the house anymore...we built a ramp for her...but walking is so hard that she'll only go out once a day anymore...It's just very sad...we're struggling to make sure that when we make this choice it's to benefit her, not because it's more convenient for us.
It sounds like it might be past helping...but, we were able to help Jayne for a number of years by adding some knox gelatine to her canned food. The vet suggested this because she couldn't take the medications...my mother-in-law also uses it to treat her osteoperosis...
i bawled like a baby, and I am not ashamed either. He was my best friend for a very long time and I loved him like he was my child. I wrapped mine in his favorite blanket and buried him under a tree. It is a difficult thing to do and if I have to do it again, I will dread it. (We now have 2 dogs that are just as spoiled). Thanks for sharing.
There is a website you can visit. It is [url]www.terrisfight.org[/url].
Karen Quinlan - her case never went beyond the courts in New Jersey. She was in a Catholic hospital and when the courts finally gave the parents permission to pull the plug on the respirator, they discovered that the nuns in the Catholic hospital who disagreed with Karen's parents had discretely weaned her off of it without the parents' knowledge. She lived in a coma for 10 years.
Nancy Cruzan (Missouri) - her case went to the Supreme Court and there was a book written by the attorney with the family that goes through all the family went through - from before her accident through after her death - and the actual process of her death after the feeding tube was removed. (It's excellent and I believe it's called The Last Goodbye, published within the last two years.)
My grandmother - her case did not go to any court. At age 97 after all her friends, her husband and her twin sister had died, one day she stopped eating. She weighed only about 67 pounds and she was tired of living; she wanted to die. The nursing home asked us if they could start force feeding her and my mother (her daughter) said absolutely not. My parents and the nurses stayed with her, gave her water and made her comfortable and she died in about 3 days, at peace.
I've done years of research on euthanasia, mercy killing and assisted suicide, here and in Europe. With my research, friends and friends of friends have told me their own stories with their own families. The cases are all sad, but they happen all the time. The best lesson is to prepare so it doesn't happen to you or your family.