[Dialogue] Fwd: Birthday Witness

Elsa Batica marosel2000 at yahoo.com
Sat Dec 14 17:30:22 PST 2019


Dick,
Thank you so much for this reflection. The reality jolts that it can happen anyway. 
We need to live life and prepare for when death come.
Count me in for reflective exercise.
ElsaBatica 

Sent from my iPhone
Batica & Associates


> On Dec 15, 2019, at 2:55 AM, Nancy Trask via Dialogue <dialogue at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
> 
> Dick, what a fantastic reflection.  Thank you for this.  I too am interested in joining such a reflective exercise.
> 
> Nancy Trask
> 515-505-0456
> nancy50273 at centurylink.net
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Joyce Sloan via Dialogue <dialogue at lists.wedgeblade.net>
> To: Colleague Dialogue <dialogue at lists.wedgeblade.net>
> Cc: Joyce Sloan <jsloan45 at gmail.com>
> Sent: Sat, 14 Dec 2019 19:51:48 -0500 (EST)
> Subject: Re: [Dialogue] Fwd: Birthday Witness
> 
> Thank you for this Dick. I'm reminded of the line from e.e.cumming's
> poem..."dying is fine, but death..o baby I wouldn't like death if it was
> good." With that, it occurs to me that near death experiences jolt our
> consciousness and awakens our awareness of our finality. But the real sting
> of death hits us in the death of a  loved one.
> 
> Perhaps the way you take the sting out of the death is by doing the kind of
> reflection on our own death that you're proposing. I would be interested in
> this webinar circle.
> 
> Grace and Peace!
> Joyce Sloan
> 
>> On Sat, Dec 14, 2019, 6:18 PM Richard Alton via Dialogue <
>> dialogue at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
>> 
>> *Death up Close*
>> 
>> It has been a rough year. Late in 2018 I fell off my bike and headed to
>> the doctor to make sure I was okay. From a CT scan discovered two lung
>> spots- four months of CT scans, a PET scan and a biopsy, (which caused a
>> collapsed lung) to find out it was nothing the doctors were concerned
>> about. But it generated a lot of thinking about my end of life, and death.
>> Even went to a Church class on sharing what you have done or need to do to
>> get ready for your funeral.
>> 
>> Then Jim Stovall, Sally’s brother (10 years in the Order), came down with
>> stage 4 cirrhosis of the liver. They worked on a liver replacement, but
>> Jim’s body became toxic and he died in April of this year. Then in May,
>> Sally (significant other for 14 years) had a major stroke and died- just to
>> give you a feel for this death up close:
>> 
>> Sally, nothing basically wrong...just general 70-year health problems... a
>> little issue with high blood pressure but controlled by pills. She was
>> getting ready for a meeting and I came into the bedroom and she was on the
>> bed- said she got dizzy in the bathroom and just barely made it to the bed.
>> She said she had a headache (her speech was a little slurred) and wanted
>> two aspirins- I gave them to her and left her on the bed for 15 minutes-
>> came back and she wanted to eat something- sure- but she could not get up
>> except her left arm- I grabbed her arm but she was not able to make it up-
>> I called ambulance-we got to the hospital- she had a massive stroke with
>> major brain bleeding... from local Western Suburban Hospital took her
>> downtown by ambulance to Rush (Chicago stroke Hospital). Arrived at
>> Hospital by 10:30pm and they determined she had lost most of her brain
>> function. We kept her on a breathing tube until her sister and daughter
>> arrived the next day and pulled tube after a prayer service with her pastor
>> Marti, Pam Bergdall, Carol (sister), Teresa (daughter), George Emerick
>> (Teresa’s father) and myself. Sally lasted about 15 minutes. In a way it
>> was great, it was quick. She was unconscious almost immediately at 730pm
>> Monday night and pronounced dead at 4:27pm the next day, May 21st.. a great
>> life
>> 
>> But I wasn’t prepared for the HOLE that was blown in my life with the loss
>> of my partner of 14 years. And in the midst of this emotional loss, I have
>> had to spend the last 7 months taking care of the aftereffects of Sally’s
>> death and re-organizing my life. So, my learnings from these 3 death
>> experiences (I count my lung problem as a near death):
>> 
>>   1.
>> 
>>   1)  In all 3 events I was struck how unprepared we are for death both
>>   in handling others deaths or our own. We are overwhelmed by the loss of our
>>   loved one to deal with what is the most important event of our or their
>>   lives. How can we pay so little attention to expressing the meaning and
>>   purpose of this glorious life we have had?
>>   2.
>> 
>>   2)  Second, death is usually hidden and then burst into our lives.
>>   Death is wicked how fast it comes and how it is all consuming and leaves
>>   little room for preparation or even thought. Sally’s stroke was
>>   unannounced, and she was gone in less that 12 hours. Jim Stovall was in a
>>   hospital fighting a losing battle for his life and Sally and his family
>>   were totally consumed with his care. It is hidden in that we do not
>>   want to even consider this end or admit to our finitude and mortality. The
>>   hiddenness from death, from this final power cuts us off from our journey
>>   leaves us shocked and disoriented in thinking/preparing to have a
>>   meaningful ending
>> 
>>   3) What happens is professionals that deal a lot with death step in
>>   and organize the readings, the message, the music, the witness, the
>>   reception as the family and friends are frozen in losing a beloved one.
>>   When you read Matthew’s The Time My Father Died and Matthews gets mad at
>>   what the funeral home had done to his father. The issue is not the funeral
>>   home but rather Joseph had not thought through his father’s death.
>> 
>> [image: page2image6769664]
>> 
>> In the case of Sally, since I had been thinking about my own death- I
>> asked ICA’s Seva Gandhi to do one of the Memorial Services witnesses to
>> Sally’s life. I asked her to reflect on Sally’s time in the Order, the
>> Ecumenical Institute and Institute of Cultural Affairs. Seva did a great
>> job capturing Sally’s thankfulness for being in a religious community and
>> how she engaged herself as being part of a global servant force that was
>> out to care for the poorest of the poor. I was so pleased that it seemed to
>> hold the depth, wonder and uniqueness of her existence;
>> 
>>   - Sally loved the religious house and the community, interaction,
>>   structures it brought her life.
>>   -
>>   - Sally loved the town meetings and her engaging the small towns
>>   across Utah. She had an amazing memory of those small town meetings and
>>   especially the songs.
>>   -
>>   - It was clear that Sally had found purpose in her life and was sent
>>   to make a difference in this world. Others sensed this too. Was pretty
>>   obvious when she died on a Tuesday and the next day, Wednesday, we held a
>>   prayer service with 100 people showing up and talked and talked about what
>>   Sally meant to their lives. And then that Saturday at her Memorial Service
>>   250 people showed up many unknown to us... people were standing in the
>>   Church aisles
>> 
>> But my lesson learned through all of this is that we need to take
>> ownership of our death and the message (word) it brings to others. I have
>> worked on my funeral: like to have the Daily Office liturgy, DH Lawrence’s
>> Not I, Not I But a New Wind Blowing Through Me read, decided what I like to
>> have read from the NT and the OT and who and what would like have sung plus
>> a witness-one being the ICA. For Sally’s Memorial Service her children
>> pulled together a slide show that was fabulous. Need to do that.
>> 
>> I think the basic message is that we need to get our deaths thought
>> through.
>> So 3 deaths (actually Sally’s sister died the year before) and a funeral
>> class has
>> 
>> made death up close as a reality. Overwhelming experience; need to bring
>> intentionality and attentionally to our deaths and the death needs to speak
>> the “Word”. So from this experience and dialogue I have joined with others
>> to form a “Death Team” (Pam Bergdall and Seva Gandhi- who says death is
>> always on her mind), We are proposing a quarterly death webinar or more
>> like a death sharing circle to get our deaths in shape...it has been said
>> that facing up to death also makes for a better life. What think you?
>> 
>> Dick Alton, RS-1, 1968, born December 14, 1941
>> 
>> --
>> Richard H. T. Alton
>> One Earth Film Fest ( OEFF)
>> Green Community Connections
>> Interfaith Green Network
>> T: 773.344.7172
>> richard.alton at gmail.com
>> **Save the Date! One Earth Film Festival 2019, March 1-10*
>> http:www.oneearthfilmfestival.org
>> 
>> Make Plain the Vision, Habakkuh 2:2
>> 
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