End: The Human Experience of Death

End: The Human Experience of Death
ISBN-10
1459666224
ISBN-13
9781459666221
Category
Death
Pages
321
Language
English
Published
2013
Author
Bianca Nogrady

Description

A fascinating exploration of the universal human experience of death. We sat around and on the bed, laughing and joking as if this was a typical family gathering. The shrunken form of our dying grandmother lay on the bed, breathing fast and shallow, her once - bright eyes half closed and sunken in their sockets. To some it might have seemed disrespectful to be treating her as part of the furniture as she took what were her very last breaths on this earth. But to us, it seemed almost normal that we should carry on being her boisterous, jovial grandchildren, filling her ears with the sounds of normality as she slipped away. Looking back on that experience, Bianca Nogrady realised she had so many questions. Was her grandmother in pain? Could she hear them? Did she know they were there? Was she aware of what was happening to her? What was she experiencing as the spark of life that had sustained her for 87 years finally flickered out? We know so much about birth - generations of women have shared their experiences with their sisters, daughters and grand - daughters, medicine has exhaustively explored and documented every possible angle of birth, and it is a joyous moment that is shared with friends and family. But at the other end of a life, death is hidden, taboo, mysterious, fearful, rarely shared and often a lonely, dark book - end. Death will come to all of us - it is one of few experiences that unites every single being on the planet. But we don't talk about it, we try not to think about it and anyone who breaks these unspoken taboos is viewed as being unnecessarily morbid. Yet many who have been present at the death of a loved one talk of it as being a gift, they have taken part in a profound moment. The End is an exploration of that experience, exploring the human experience of death from every angle - the spiritual, the historical, the physical, the metaphysical; from the perspective of those who have witnessed it, those who face it, and those who have somehow stepped back from it. The End investigates an experience common to every single one of us and does so in a way that is engaging, compelling, a bit funny and a bit quirky in places, heartbreaking in others, but most of all fascinating. The End provides a different framework through which to view death instead of the fear and mystery that so often shrouds this incredibly important moment of life.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Changing of the Guard
    By Karen Thomas

    After the death of her beloved grandfather, sixteen-year-old Caroline resists change, spending her time with an elderly grandmother or alone, until a flamboyant new girl at school draws her reluctantly...

  • Dark Homecoming
    By William Patterson

    Mrs. Hoffman was waiting for her. “Mrs. Huntington just came down these stairs and she did not look happy,” the housekeeper said, her eyes practically vibrating in her unmoving face. “What has been going on?” Variola came into view over ...

  • The Death of Meriwether Lewis: A Historic Crime Scene Investigation
    By James E. Starrs, Kira Gale

    (16) Thomas Jefferson to Paul Allen These three excerpts are taken from a biographical essay of Meriwether Lewis which Thomas Jefferson was asked to provide for the publication of the Lewis and Clark Journals in 1814. Paul Allen was the ...

  • The Last Dance: Encountering Death and Dying
    By Lynne Ann DeSpelder, Albert Lee Strickland

    Jim Nichols , a computer software salesman from Greenville , S.C. , buried his younger brother Chris in Ramsey Creek after the 28 - year - old died of cancer in May . “ Chris was what you might call a hippie , and he was very conscious ...

  • Selected Readings in Child Development: Chapter 19. Death, dying and bereavement
    By Laura E. Berk, Berk

    Selected Readings in Child Development: Chapter 19. Death, dying and bereavement

  • Death and the Meaning of Life: Selected Writings of Leo Tolstoy
    By graf Leo Tolstoy

    Presents materials that reveal the essence of Tolstoy's beliefs on immortality, death, God, and the meaning of life.

  • Jezebel's Daughter
    By Wilkie Collins

    This tautly suspenseful tale full of betrayal and unexpected plot twists is a worthy diversion.

  • Her Last Appearance
    By Mary Elizabeth Braddon

    Our narrator tells the sad tale of her marriage, marred by a husband who breaks her heart spending their money in disreputable establishments, while she, Barbara, slowly withers away.

  • Don't Look Back
    By Audrey P. Johnson

    “ Chocolate chip . My favorite kind . " Marsha poured the iced tea . " I've been meaning to ask you . Is Gabe short for Gabriel ? ” " No , it's even worse . I was named Galbraith Allen . Galbraith was my mother's maiden name . ” 67.

  • Laura
    By Saki

    This is the story of Laura, Amanda and a she-otter, executed in Saki's characteristic witty and caustic style.