Trust:
A Tribute to Michael Schiavo
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
Last
year at this time my wife, Charmaine, was dying in a hospice program.
She too had a tube that she could be fed with and like Terri Schiavo
told her husband, Charmaine told me that she wanted nothing extraordinary
done to prolong her life.
When
she was no longer able to verbally express her wishes, Charmaine
had to trust that I would stand firm and stop any move to keep her
alive with artificial means. It was hard to do that. I loved her
and didn’t want her to go. I wanted just a little more time with
her so I could say everything I had said to her over again, but
I also knew that I had the very awesome responsibility to live by
her wishes.
Charmaine
trusted me and that meant a lot. No matter what, I had to think
about all the talks we had about her dying. I was lucky, because
no one protested her wishes.
Michael
Schiavo’s life would have been so much easier if he would have just
walked away from his wife and let people keep her alive for as long
as they could. According to the New York Times, Terri Schiavo’s
"heart stopped because of an undiagnosed potassium deficiency,
on February 26, 1990." That is fifteen years ago and since
that time she has been in a "persistent vegetative state, meaning
she could breathe on her own and had periods of wakefulness, but
was incapable of thought, memory, or emotion."
Michael
Schiavo tried for several years to rehabilitate his wife, even taking
her to California for an experimental brain treatment, but nothing
worked. The media never tells us about this, but there have been
many reports of groups offering Michael big money to walk away,
and he didn’t.
It
took a lot of guts to do what this husband did for his wife. He
stayed married to her when it would have been much easier to give
the responsibility of her care to her parents, who challenged his
right to make decisions for her.
CNN
reported that Terri Schiavo’s husband Michael was with her when
she died.
I
was with Charmaine when she died too and even though she was in
the hospice program and we knew she was going to die, when it actually
happened, it was devastating.
My
thoughts and prayers go out to Michael in his time of grief and
to all of Terri’s loved ones. I have nothing but respect and admiration
for the job Michael Schiavo did in keeping with his wife’s wishes.
I know it was a gut wrenching job and there is no doubt in my mind,
that many times he thought of walking away, but Terri put her trust
in her husband and he honored that trust. What more can a spouse
ask for.
April
1, 2005
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of VFW Post 3869,
works to educate the American public on the consequences of war.
His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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