I sat next to the hospital bed with my head bowed and watched my friend breathe. The once mighty chest rose and fell with a meekness he never showed in life. And yet, the monitors with the squiggly lines and the beeps said he was alive. Was this life? I remembered how he had behaved when someone tried to mug him. I was there, but a few seconds into the intended mugging, you couldn’t understand who was mugging who. The only explanation he gave later was “When life comes at you with a knife, you go at it with a pickax”. I smiled at the memory, but mourned the present. Shouldn’t it be the other way around?
I pulled the cables. I turned off the monitors and knocked over the IV drip. His eyes fluttered open and looked at me, even as his body shook and struggled. But his eyes stayed fixed on me, till it glazed over in the end. Eyes that had remained closed for the past two weeks, reopened to see the end. I kept looking back, even as they rushed in and dragged me away. They would not believe it and I did not say it, but I knew what I saw in his eyes. They saw him die helpless, unassisted. I saw him die just as he had lived, just as he had wanted- defiant.
An ultra short story I wrote in 2016 and rescued from a now defunct websiteeuthanasia
Wow! People have different perspectives on Euthanasia, while some consider it murder, for some, it is the only way to save their loved ones from agony, and bid them a dignified good-bye.
Most people don’t understand the 2nd set of people, and what goes in their mind- you captured it so well in that one line- smiling at the memory and mourning the present. Shouldn’t it be the other way round?
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Honestly I’m not sure I know what’s the right or wrong thing in this case. But as a writer wanted to explore the other perspective
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You paint a picture with words…
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A depressing one in this case
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