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196 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2010
"Yet there is no evil so great that God cannot bring joy and goodness from it. That is why death deserves our attention in life. Because we instinctively want to avoid it, to turn our face away, it is good to look death in the eye and constantly remind ourselves that our hope is in God, who defeated death.""Byock says we all need to say four things to a dying person: "Please forgive me," "I forgive you," "Thank you" and "I love you."
As a recent widow, I find it hard to find the words, even to myself, what it's like. I think he says it beautifully here:". . . out of the depths of the traumatic severing of a beloved relationship, the mourner must slowly rebuild a life as a new person. Mourners will suffer the death of all the ways they have absorbed the characters of their loved ones. All the ways one person relies on another must be taken up for oneself. This takes time and a great deal of healing."
The chapter on gradual dying and end of life care is an important one. Medical technology keeps people alive longer and longer, it's important to choose what you want, not just for your families but for the medical profession. It's always hard to face our mortality, isn't it? But it's good to do so.
If you are a Christian, then you know as I do, that we have a Hope, Who is Our Lord, and we'll be with Him. All the more reason to plan our deaths well so we can point people to Jesus."The living Christians and the dead are still of one body, still of one hope."Dying is an art only because through it God is at work. Only in God's hand can something ugly and terrible be transformed into a thing of beauty and purpose. In the end death is as mysterious to us as resurrection."