Awake At The
Bedside - Zen and the Art of Dying
05/23/2016 Nancy Doyle Palmer
Huffington Post
The editors of Awake at the Bedside:
Contemplative Teachings on Palliative and End-of- Life Care
want to make one thing very clear: this book is not about dying,
it's about life and what it can teach us, it's about caring and
what giving care really means.
Equal parts instruction manual and contemplative
testimony ,this book addresses how we think about death and dying
and examines current practices in palliative and end-of-life care,
with important suggestions for improvement.
Key elements to this new way of approaching the
end of life include both presence and a way to make the interaction
between 'us' and 'them' more collaborative, and with any spiritual
luck, more beautiful.
Zen teacher Koshin Paley Ellison, who co-founded
the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care (NYZCCC) in 2007
with Robert Chodo Campbell have transformed the narrative around
end-of-life practice on a national level. In just nine years,
NYZCCC has brought contemplative care to 80,000 individuals, and
has trained more than 600 physicians, nurses, social workers, and
chaplains. Thirty-five medical residencies across the country have
integrated their curriculum.
What Ellison and co-editor Matt Weingast have to teach us is
invaluable - wisdom and counsel for those who keep watch at the
bedside. The Buddhist approach brings a grace to an often difficult
and frightening time that is beyond comforting, it's
life-changing.
And the nicest part is that all of this is shared
with an abundance of joy and the kindest and best of intentions. A
gift.
I've written before
about how loss and dying changed my own life and was
honored to interview Koshin Paley Ellison about this
book:
Nancy Doyle Palmer
: Can you elaborate on what is new about the ways
you approach end-of-life care in this book?
Koshin Paley
Ellison: We are because of
relationships. The New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care is
focused on how to live an engaged life, and we do this through
study, care and meditation. All three aspects are integral in our
view of how to offer contemplative care. Contemplative care is a
practitioner who maintains their own deep meditation practice with
a community and teacher, who understands that everything and
everyone is a teacher, and who come alive through constant study
and realizes that care is a practice of generosity. I understand
generosity as giving and receiving as one. So, there is no
"self-care." If we care we include ourselves and others.
When I set out to create this book, I wanted to
have all the voices of people on the ground doing the work--from
the pioneers of hospice and grief work to contemporary
contemplative teachers and caregivers. Matt, my co-editor and dear
friend, and I culled together all those we love and feel nourished
by. We did this because this is the approach to contemplative
care--we can't do it alone in a singular voice. This is what is new
and old. We used to value community more. So, this book is about
remembering there are so many vital voices to nourish and support
us. To do this well, we need each other. So, this book's approach
is a reminder of community and practice and to engage fully. How do
we each do that? As one of the marvelous contributors writes,
"Feast on your life."
NDP: How do you work with people, particularly of
an older generation, who do not wish to talk about their feelings
or have frank discussions about the fact that they are
dying?
KPE: Most
of us live in unspoken fears. I was training a group of seventy
doctors, with Chodo, and we asked them what they are afraid of.
Pain, loss, change were the themes. So ordinary. In my experience,
people are afraid, and when I meet someone who does not want to
talk about their feelings or speak frankly, I ask them what they
want to talk about.
I had the privilege to meet a middle aged man with metastatic
cancer said, "I don't do feelings." He told me about the baseball
game, and how he was worried that his team was not going to make it
to the world series this year. "They always go," he said. So we
talked about baseball, and how it was an anchor for him in his
life, and how his winning team was not making it, broke his heart.
It made him sad. "What will happen to them?" he asked. "What do you
imagine?" I said. "I don't know," he said, "I am just worried they
will fall away into insignificance." "What then?" I asked. "Well,"
he said looking out the window, "I guess we all have our time."
"Sounds like that is really true for you," I said. "Yep," he said,
"it is really true for me too. I am disappointed and yet okay with
it too. I go with me team."
We are always telling our whole story. To me, we
can just learn to pay attention and receive fully where the person
is without an agenda. Without needing to talk about something in a
particular way. Of course this is easy to say and takes a life time
to practice. And this is the joy of practicing care and meditation.
It is a lifetime of curiosity and investigation.
NDP: What
do you advise when the person who is facing end-of-life is fearful,
panicked, anguished, in turmoil? How can that person be
helped?
KPE: I am a very curious person now. So if someone
is afraid, I am curious about their fear and anguish. The best help
is not to try to fix them and to not try to push away those
feelings because I am uncomfortable with them.
Recently I met a woman in her fifties who was
raging and in pain. She was dying and really was sure this was not
supposed to happen. When we talked together we told me how she had
waited her whole life to retire so that she can begin to really
live and fulfill her "bucket list." This was not going to happen,
and she was howling in pain about it. It felt as if the universe
had conspired against her. This howling needs to be heard. It isn't
easy, and yet most valuable moments in life are not easy--they take
diligence. Like all the great stories of the worlds religions and
myths--it isn't just about the simple way. And yet, the simple way
to meet ourselves and others in the moment. She told me she now
really related to the Virgin Mary because she had to suffer her son
dying and not growing old. "The thing is," she said, "I know I am
not going to grow old and it pains me. I was living for another
time." "What is the time you have?" I asked. "Two months," she
said. "How do you want to be in that time?" I asked. "Maybe just be
really angry and bitter," she said. "Okay, that's possible," I
said. She looked at me surprised, and said "What did you say? Did
you say that is possible?" "Yes" I said. "Wow," she said. You are
the first person to say that.
Everyone is always trying to tell me they are
going to find a cure and to cheer up. Everyone is so f--cking
uncomfortable with me. The truth is I don't want to do that stewing
in misery. I want to live these days differently." "That's also
possible," I said. And for the first time, her face softened and
almost appeared to smile.
She reminds me we need to be heard and that is
the heart of Awake at the Bedside. It is not called
How I am Comfortable at the Bedside. We can be awake to
all the joys and sorrows and be forever changed. This is why I am
so honored to be able to live this life.
NDP: What has been your biggest challenge with
people in the medical community concerning end-of-life
issues?
KPE:The
biggest challenge is the treatment of people as people. This is not
a new event. It turns out that the oldest stories in the world are
about people treating each other in challenging ways. Of course, we
also live in a time when we send the sick to hospitals, the elderly
to nursing homes and the dying to hospices. Old age, sickness and
death are such powerful teachers. So, the book and our organization
are about doing the radical pivot--turning towards what we fear and
being a source of compassion and wisdom in the places of great
suffering. We will all get older, get sick and die. The historical
Buddha reminds us that our actions are our only true belongings.
So, we have the unique opportunity to engage through study, care
and meditation. We have the opportunity to plunge fully into life.
What will you do with your days? This is the great question to live
with each day.
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