A Friend Stopped By | 02/16/2009 6:00 am
The Final Martini: Refreshing Ways to Die (Instead of Aging)

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
Somehow, over the years, I have been close to a lot of death happening to people "ahead of their time" - a rock climbing accident, the one in a million Cruezfeldt-Jakob disease, sudden stroke and heart attack, and, of course, the slower more familiar killers of cancer and AIDS. Seems to me that it’s a good idea to prepare for our deaths at any age, not just old age, though I know it is much easier to say than to do.
It seems pretty important, too, to deeply consider what death actually IS, so that our end of life, whether it comes suddenly or slowly, is lived as good preparation for what comes next. It would be wonderful if we could begin to discuss this topic socially with warmth and compassion and humor (thank you, Meg!), not as something alien and remote, but in the sure and tender knowledge that death - and the undiscovered path each of us will travel to meet it - is the thing we have most in common. Let’s help each other find the courage to ease the path.
I read somewhere that, after her kids are grown, the best thing a woman can do is die. I think whoever wrote that, and the women who fantasize about the Final Cocktail, want to relieve the world of old hags. But women should not go along with it!
The "battalion of elderly people" that Meg Federico talked to were probably "angry, resentful, and depressed" because their adult children have, or want to, "put them away."
My husband and I are taking legal steps to prevent our children from putting us away. And when we get to our 70s—we’re in our early 60s now—we’ll move to Europe or South America, as my mother-in-law did. She’s 95, has live-in help (it doesn’t cost a fortune there), and calls all her own shots.
It’s here in the U.S., the country built on independence, that older people have their independence taken from them.
No, it’s pretty much the same in London , where I live. What you really need is a big Mediterranean family which incorporates elderly people in a natural way, with small children around as companions and all the older children looking out for Grandma…
My friend and I plan to ride my then-ancient horse off a cliff in Ireland. Here’s the scenario: two old ladies, naked on a horse, running to the cliff. The horse sees the cliff and comes to a very fast stop, we go over his head to our deaths, he looks down and thinks, "ooh. Look. Grass." and starts to eat.