It must be the painkillers, we thought. Or maybe hypoxia, the oxygen deprivation in the blood that often contributes to delirium in sick people. Or that the cancer now was destroying his mind, just as it had racked his body.

But then our cousin Lynne mentioned that her parents had done a lot of similar traveling in the last days of their cancer battles. Uncle Larry (Lynne’s father) had insisted that his passport and fanny pack be kept by his bedside; he was intent on keeping an imaginary 3 p.m. appointment with the emperor of Japan, where I was living then and where he had hoped to visit. He too had asked for a map — of Japan. Aunt Lois, who had died four years before, had talked about needing to catch a train, asking Lynne to buy her a ticket.

There seemed to be a pattern. —Valerie ReitmanTaking Life’s Final Exit (Yahoo!|LA Times)

I don’t usually blog articles that will expire soon, but this one really caught my interest. Very intersting.

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  • Difficult for me to read right now, but I did find it both interesting and uplifting. Thanks.

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Dennis G. Jerz

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