Art of Dying Art of Dying_Volume III_joomag | Page 80
SUSAN BUHLMAN
When
you’re
from
outside
looking in,
you see
things that
the family
doesn't
notice.
80 | ART OF DYING
My father passed away under hospice care. I was living
out of state at the time. Its uncomfortable when you can't
be with someone when they're dying. I felt it would be a
little bit of a payback if I sat with people in hospice when
their family members couldn’t be there.
My experience in hospice started out with just simple
visits, social calls in the facilities. It grew into my going
to people's homes to sit with them so the caregivers
could take a break. From there it morphed into where
I would go to someone's home every week and get to
know the dying person more deeply.
As I was spending more time with the same folks, I
started to sense how they were feeling as they were
dying. When you’re from outside looking in, you see
things that the family doesn't notice. It's an emotionally
draining time when somebody in your family or a loved
one is dying. You're thinking of everything from renting
medical equipment to keeping doctor appointments to
funeral arrangements and calling Cousin So-and-So to
urge him to visit. You get so wrapped up in all of that, that
you start to lose sight of the fact that this is a once-in-a-
lifetime opportunity to just sit with this person and help
them transition. I found myself filling that role.
As I saw how families were so unprepared to work with
a dying person, I started taking more upon myself. Death
doula certification came next. There's a broad range of
definitions for a doula. In the hospice world, it is defined
as someone who comes in the last 24 hours when people
often have a difficult time being alone.
A death doula working independently from hospice has
more freedom to expand into different territories, like
religious support and memorial planning. When you're
associated with hospice, you have to follow their plan.
Hospice does a very good job while obeying a lot of federal,
Medicare and Medicaid guidelines that are very strict on
what volunteers can and cannot do, whether they're a
doula or not. The ideal situation is that your friends and
family learn of your wishes early on and be there as active
transition team members.