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On the occasion of my mother-in-law's 100th birthday, I asked for her thoughts as she contemplated a second century. "Keep your mind open and your mouth shut!" she quickly replied. I disagreed with the latter part of that sentence, but out of respect I kept my mouth shut.
Four months later she passed away. Her dying took more time than we would have wished, and it was both painful for her and for us to witness. A severe case of gout ignited and exacerbated other maladies, sending her small, fragile body into a tailspin from which she could not recover. "If I had a poison pill I would take it!" she said to her three children, all of whom are more than 70 years old.
She had survived two forms of cancer in her later years: thyroid and a more obscure cancer: Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia, a white blood cell cancer. Her thyroid was removed as was the cancer. For the second cancer she underwent only one chemo treatment and her symptoms disappeared.
When the gout attack took away her ability to stand she required full-time nursing care. We moved her from the assisted living apartment that she occupied for 10 years to a private room in our local nursing home. When the kind orderlies gently placed her in the van to be transported to her new home, she said, "Now, you remember to overdose me when we get there."
She was not joking.
She lasted 12 days, much of the time still in discomfort despite doses of morphine. When she would awake she would look around and sigh with disappointment, "Oh, so I'm still alive."