Wednesday, Aug 9
I am incredibly saddened to tell you our AMAZING Mike has passed on. As with all things Mike, he did not follow the “normal” route. The beginning of the end started on July 6th with the oncologist in Boston telling us “your disease progressed in 16 months towhat most men can go through over 10 years.” Two days after hearing that news Mike leads a few climbs in Squamish. He’s exhausted and in pain, but determined to climb knowing it was the last time he will be dancing up a rock wall. That full moon night we find ourselves driving to the emergency room in Bellingham, WA where we hear the grim prognosis….”you have weeks to live.”
We come home for him to say his last goodbyes. He continues to amaze the hospice staff by bicycling to acupuncture appointments and walking up steep hills for several miles. He is getting weaker and weaker and yet last Thursday he cycled to his appointment, when most people in his condition would be bedridden by then.
Yesterday morning Mike woke up after sleeping a solid 17 hours. The hospice nurse arrived and he surprised her by sitting straight up in bed. He managed to walk into the living room, where he sat in his favorite red chair prepared to take his morning medication. The dose had recently increased to 2 pills of morphine. I wanted to make sure he was getting it right so I asked him if he had 2 pills in his hand. He proceeds to put his hands together, rolls the pills around, and in a abracadabra move he opens both hands with a pill in each palm. We still had our Mikey and expected we would for several more days. However, a mere eleven hours later Mike took his last breath.
Through a series of synchronicities and divine right order our dear friend Nancy (driving from Orcas Island to help us during the dying process) arrived at our house an hour earlier. The on call hospice nurse was swamped and out on a call an hour awqy. It was a full moon, just like the Bellingham ER, one month earlier. We heard the same response “it’s a full moon, everything’s crazy tonight.” Miraculously our daily hospice nurse Sarah answered her phone while out to dinner. (Everything people say about hospice is true! They are amazing!) Sarah came over while her kids sat in the car, got us settled, drove the kids home and then came back to help. Having Nancy for support and Sarah with her knowledge was invaluable. Once again I couldn’t help feeling blessed and in extreme gratitude during such an emotionally heart wrenching experience.
It was a quick and peaceful passing. Sarah said the most peaceful she’s ever seen.
A few days after Mike’s last blog post he started to lose some cognitive abilities. His liver was failing and not properly flushing toxins from his body. It was affecting his ability to read and write. Everyday he talked about trying to write another blog post but he couldn’t. This is what he drafted:
The Beginning of my end
Wednesday, July 31
With severe reservations I dare say I am entering the beginning of my end.
For the past 4 days I have wrestled with the question as to whether my time has come to simply move on. I continuously sleep as my body withers away helplessly refuses food at every turn. Additionally, it is quite difficult for me to………….
Please watch the blog for information about a Celebration of Life sometime in September. Date and location will be announced soon.
All my love, Laurie