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The Book Party

A Friend Stopped By | 02/16/2009 6:00 am

The Final Martini: Refreshing Ways to Die (Instead of Aging)

Author of the new book Welcome to the Departure Lounge contemplates an absurd end-of-life fantasy to deal with wrinkles
By Meg Federico
Meg Federico/Photo Courtesy of Heather P. Rose

Editor’s Note: Meg Federico, author of Welcome to the Departure Lounge: Adventures in Mothering Mother, regularly writes humor for The National Post. Her work has appeared in The Globe and Mail, Shambhala Sun and Agni Magazine (Boston University Press). She has written commentary and created documentaries for CBC Radio. For several years, she wrote a successful column, "Transitions: Issues in Caregiving," for the Halifax Daily News. She lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia with her family.

"If I ever get like that, take me out behind the barn and shoot me!" says my best friend Julie, when cheerful topics like dementia or incontinence crop up. Based on the cocktail party chatter among my peers, plenty of well-adjusted, non-suicidal 50-somethings dread living too long. Unsure and afraid, we run on our treadmills, we run to Pilates, we run to the plastic surgeon — because the prospect of eating your sushi with a "spork" is less than appetizing.

But you can get your face lifted from here to Venus; you still might end up with a walker and a diaper. With that in mind, my friends and I script end-of-life scenarios that give us a sense of hope — where "hope" is the option to avoid those extra decades that modern medicine offers us. When I was a kid, bored on a Saturday afternoon, I’d amuse myself by wondering which is worse: boiling or freezing to death. Now, 40 years later. I’m thinking about it again. Because, let’s face it, human beings can expect to live longer than ever, but secretly — unless we’re "sharp as a tack" and "fit as a fiddle" — most of us hope we won’t have to.

Having seen our own parents linger, depressed and diminished, most of us don’t want to follow suit. We’d rather die, or so we say.

So with forced bravado, Julie and I cooked up a scheme we call the Final Martini. Resplendent in our formal attire (we spend a fair amount of time planning our outfits), we imagine a drive to the beach and a terminal cocktail (we haven’t figured out what exactly goes into it), imbibed as the tide goes out under a setting sun. And it turns out Julie and I aren’t the only ones with secret plans. My cousin Elizabeth, pro-freezing even as a kid, says she’ll walk into the woods on a cold snowy night with a bottle of cognac. Ever the practical one, prior to her moonlight hike Elizabeth plans to mail a letter to the cops detailing her location.

"I wouldn’t want some poor stranger walking a dog to find me." My, doesn’t she think of everything?                   

Jean, my control freak, marathon-running doctor friend, shares this cheerful thought: "I’m likely to get run over by a truck on the highway when I’m out jogging." "What if you don’t?" I ask. "A self-administered overdose," she counters, matter-of-factly.

Sounds so simple, yet glitches abound. Where will she hide her stash of pills? "Oh, in the back of my bathroom drawer," she says airily. Her children are all male. In my household, the girls ransack my drawers on a regular basis. They have a better idea of the contents than I do. They’d have no difficulty putting two and two together and relieving poor old Mom of her exit strategy.  

Some of my pals are less hard-core. For Carolyn, the concrete details are taboo. "I’m an optimist," she says vaguely. "I hope to go to sleep and not wake up." A nice thought, but you may as well hope for eternal youth.

Statistically speaking, after age 75 you may very well have arthritis, macular degeneration, dementia, incontinence and a lot more face time with your doctor. If you wind up in the care system, you’ll never be alone long enough to mix up the gin and strychnine. To carry out your exit plan, you need strength, gumption — and privacy.

75 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Jeannot Kensinger
Reality check : 76 almost 77, no diapers, no walkers, a good cut off date would be 90.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 02/16/2009 6:56 am
Alice Reese
The key is hopefully to be able to still recognize when it is Martini Time!
By Alice Reese on 02/20/2009 9:58 am
Michael Salling

elaine s. writes, at what is now page 5 of this thread:

For myself, my ideal would be to assist myself right out of this life, when I know I have had my last, best day.  That’s impossible to define.  For many people, the best they can do is have a living will.  Mine is brutally strightforward, basicaly, when I’m too sick to sit up and order from the menu, they can pull the plug….  How do you know when to go?  If you wait too long, you lose your options, and this decision is so big you can’t put it onto anyone else.  When, indeed, is the last, best day?
By Michael Salling on 03/02/2009 9:51 pm
Michael Salling
Mahalo, Elaine — it’s a great comment, and question; they underlie Meg’s essay and many of the comments here. This is a topic I have rarely failed to ponder each and every day for the past 2 years. For me, the grim reality of inherited Alzheimer’s on my father’s side looms, but so does the daily struggle with depression that so often leaves me unable to find a reason to leave my bed in the morning.
By Michael Salling on 03/02/2009 9:56 pm
Wow Trop de classe
My Dad is 80. Last April he had a knee replacement operation so he could walk further and stronger with his beloved Doberman Pincer, Chance, a young, handsome and vivacious rescue pooch. The knee operation went fine, but Dad contracted staph infection in his intestines, leg and foot. Much of his intestines were removed and he was given a colostomy, he nearly lost his leg, and they cut off most of his foot, he is 6’2” and lost 1/2 of his body weight. During recovery my brother died in the most unbelievable and tragic way. Then the shoulder pain he was having and believed was a pulled muscle was diagnosed as metastized bone cancer. And he’s losing thousands a day in his investments. Dad’s response to all of it was “They’ll have to kick my screaming and yelling off this planet.” Heis funny, positive, optimistic, sharp as can be and the King of email and all kinds of Internet things that I don’t know how to do…and I’m a techie! And now months later after a horrendous recovery he is happy to be walking with a cane, and the only complaint is that he misses salads. I think Dad is admirable and courageous. I hope to have a bit of those tough genes.
By Wow Trop de classe on 02/16/2009 7:41 am
Jeannot Kensinger
Indeed Suzanne your dad is to be admired for his courage. What he experienced in the last year no one should have to deal with and yet there he is walking again. Thank you for sharing his optimism.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 02/16/2009 8:35 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
And if I remember, Suzanne, your Dad loves Sinatra who I’m sure has helped him do it “his way.” What a trooper!
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 02/16/2009 9:49 am
Beverley Maddox
Suzanne de Cornelia.. Your Dad sounds like an awesome man. I love his attitude ! You are truly blessed to have him! Thank you for telling us about him.
By Beverley Maddox on 02/16/2009 9:53 am
belladora smith
Wow! If I dont write or read anything else today it dosnt matter. YES! Your Dad is admirable and courageous. Even though I dont know him personally Im going to ponder this and think of him all day. Fantastic! Give him a big hug for me.
By belladora smith on 02/17/2009 7:46 am
Michael Salling
By God’s grace, your remarkable Dad emerged with his strong mind and will intact, and able to care for himself. I pray he and you will have years more to share the his triumph, and to celebrate your life together.
By Michael Salling on 03/02/2009 10:13 pm
Ms. Dee
No. I don’t intend to outlive my vitality. And I do honestly believe we should all be provided with the final martini option. I’m too busy right now to come up with a solid plan, but when I feel like my body has really started dying, I hope I won’t be forced to do anything to prolong the agony.
By Ms. Dee on 02/16/2009 7:51 am
Beverley Maddox
Hmmm. Good morning everyone.. I have to say this is a depressing way to start a Monday, but.. Ok. I have worked in both nursing homes and also doing in home care for the elderly. And yes , getting to the age where your normally sharp mind is no longer an option but a thing of the past. That would scare anyone. However, I personally am a devout beleiver in God and don’t beleive that if one were to end his/her own life that you could be forgiven. I may be wrong here. But ( I ) am not willing to risk going to hell over it. In this particular case ..you might also peg me as devout..coward that is.
By Beverley Maddox on 02/16/2009 7:57 am
Beverley Maddox
Ooops… typo - believe*
By Beverley Maddox on 02/16/2009 8:00 am
Dee T
My mom is in the late stages of Alzheimer’s, a very cruel way to spend the latter years of life. Although she is unable to speak, barely a glimmer left of what she once was, there are days she makes eye contact with me and I swear I can read what she wants to tell me, I can see her recognition of me, her love for me. The unconditional love of a mother. And although it is so painful for me to see her like this, those days of connection are so precious. She had a blessed life and I know and even wish she should move on, but God determines the right time. I think instead of thinking about that last martini, walk in the woods, or drive off a cliff, we should be making the “bucket list”. Make the time we have living more vibrant, more meaningful, more loving, so we will be more patient waiting for God to call us home. Why hurry the process? Life is a journey.. the happy and the sad trips.
By Dee T on 02/16/2009 8:26 am
Beverley Maddox

Dee T  - Thank you for sharing your story with us. I have worked with Alheimer’s patient’s. And I know exactly what you are referring to. They do have moments of recognition. And I can just imagine how precious those times are for you! 

I couldn’t have said it any better Shugg!

By Beverley Maddox on 02/17/2009 11:30 pm