Married 54 Years, They Chose to Die Together

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kelvin070

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Source:Married 54 Years, They Chose to Die Together - MORE Magazine

What attracts us to the British couple whose joint assisted suicide has set off a firestorm of criticism?
Sir Edward Downes was a British conductor; his wife, Lady Joan, was a former ballerina, choreographer and TV producer. They were educated and prominent--but last week they chose to end their lives, hand in hand, via assisted suicide at a Zurich clinic. They left no explanation; what's known is that, at 85, Sir Edward was almost blind and increasingly deaf; Lady Joan, at 74, may have received a diagnosis of terminal cancer. Their adult children issued a statement: "After 54 happy years together, they decided to end their own lives rather than continue to struggle with serious health problems. They died peacefully, and under circumstances of their own choosing...." Since the double death, a firestorm of criticism has raged and most of it is very reasonable. But at the center of it all are a husband and wife--and what draws us to them may not be reasonable but it's real.

Ethicists worry that stories like this could make it fashionable to decide to die alongside one's life partner, or that one spouse could pressure another to make that choice. (Women are seen as particularly susceptible to this bullying, although historically, wives haven't exactly raced to throw themselves on the suttee.)
One professor noted that while some see a beautiful love story in the Downses, others would describe their marriage as "a pathologically enmeshed relationship." Well, maybe--but that could also arguably describe Romeo and Juliet, Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Mary Wollstonecraft and Percy Bysshe Shelley, Eleanor and Franklin, Jackie and JFK, and let's not even start on Elizabeth Taylor and her Middle Period husbands. Of these, only Juliet chose to end her own life rather than go it alone, but all these couples were passionate, extreme and, admit it, much more fascinating than sensible, healthy relationships.

Another critic objected that the Downes story "makes death a lifestyle choice." No, it's a deathstyle choice, and most of us will not, in fact, ever make it. (Even Heathcliff didn't, for all his carrying on.) But lying down together, willingly, after half a century of marriage, and linking hands one last time--say it's sad, even say it's crazy, but don't ever say it's not romantic.
 
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Minor Axis

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The worry about assisted suicide mostly comes from Godly people who believe it is a sin, and you'll burn for eternity as a result of it. However setting religion aside, you are gonna "go", so is choosing the time and place all that terrible? Personally I don't feel there would be any spiritual consequences of killing ones self. And if you believe in a loving God, you felt strongly enough about it to do it for whatever the reason, your unhappy, tormented, in constant pain, lost your quality of life. Why would God want to heap on you after?

Staying physically alive as long as possible, is that God's policy or is it more manipulation from the church?
 

Lord Stanley

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if your faith in God were so strong that you beleived it a sin, you would take no part - for the rest of us - carry on - it is the decent, humane approach to the end.
 

Burntblood

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Minor Axis is dead right.
Assisted suicide in many cases is the humane and ethical thing to do IMO.
My dad was a hell of a father and man but he came down with Alzheimers 10 years ago and now is a shadow of his former self. It gets worse all the time. Just when you think it can't, it does.
I know my mother with her sometimes ridiculous religious notions would never ever consider assisted suicide in my father's case but to see my dad slowly wither away is just gut wrenching.
If an animal was in the same situation as my father it would be put down immediately.
I love my father and would dearly miss him but the thing is I already do miss him. He is already gone but he's still alive.
It's fucking brutal.
 

Peter Parka

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Should still be illegal. Legalising it opens the door for putting pressure on the old ect where there is a big fat inheritance involved.
 

Dana

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The worry about assisted suicide mostly comes from Godly people who believe it is a sin, and you'll burn for eternity as a result of it. However setting religion aside, you are gonna "go", so is choosing the time and place all that terrible? Personally I don't feel there would be any spiritual consequences of killing ones self. And if you believe in a loving God, you felt strongly enough about it to do it for whatever the reason, your unhappy, tormented, in constant pain, lost your quality of life. Why would God want to heap on you after?

Staying physically alive as long as possible, is that God's policy or is it more manipulation from the church?
I'm not religious and I have my nays about it
 
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