Dying Well
Dying well is (hopefully) the last part of our efforts to age well.
As part of our life planning, we need to think about what dying well means for each of us.
And it is not easy to distinguish clearly between reasonably hopeful planning for our dying days and what is just “hoping for the best” while avoiding real preparation.
We need to recognize that at some point dying becomes something we cannot bargain with. It will eventually happen on its own terms.
It is reasonable to think about what we hope for, but then we need to ask “What can I do to increase my chances of dying as I hope?” and “What should I do to prepare for the possibility that things may not go as I hope?”
For those of us who are planning and making life/home adjustments to age in place, do we also hope to die in place? Do we also have plans if it turns out that dying in place is not possible? What are these plans?
I’ll share some personal things later, but will stop here for open ended responses.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Aging Well Support Group.
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Another related article appeared in todays NY Times about honoring the wishes of those faced with dementia and how they may have expressed desire for the end of life, along with the related complexities involved with this: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/30/well/late-stage-dementia-minimal-comfort-feeding-advance-directives.html
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8 ReactionsGreat article from the Times. Great thread as well. I was a hairdresser until I retired last year. I was fortunate enough to have customers that shared some of their experiences. Such as when my mother was dying of ovarian cancer 25 years ago , a customer telling me how hindsight, she realized that some of the medical treatment she had her mother go through was more for herself, not bearing letting go of her mother. Others shared stories of not being prepared with bank accounts and for women sometimes the difficulty getting papers transferred to their name [from joint accounts] that they knew if they had passed first, most likely their husbands wouldn't have had to jump through such hoops. Trying to get my husband to have things in order is difficult. Even though his health isn't good his denial runs deep. We have estate planning all done but as I've told him, the attorney isn't going to come clean your office or take care of your storage. I know I don't want to leave a mess for my children.
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10 Reactions@edsutton beautiful post, one i want to remember…thanks , and sending hugs.
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2 Reactions@ess77
Wow! You are my new hero. You have inspired me to get off my “ “ and do the things that I need to do. I wish you all the best.
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2 ReactionsEd and All:
I had a GP who told he would keep working until I died, then he retired anyway! We are still good friends. My wife died 11 years ago after she was diagnosed with ALS. She did beat the average of two years from diagnoses for 2 years, eight months. Our second daughter became her caregiver and now she is mine.
My situation may be unique but I don't believe so. When I moved to MN in 1974, I bought 40 acres of woods and had a house built on it. Well before my wife became ill, we had a chat with a lawyer and defined an estate for the property and house to become assets of the estate. The tax benefits are significant at the time of mt death. I have stopped driving so all of my assets are now in the name of the estate.
I have been Type 2 diabetic since 1991 and in the last two years I have gotten better. My insulin requirements are now at an all time low. I take Ozempic and have lost 30 kilograms (66 pounds) and would like to loose ten or more pounds--22 pounds would put me at the weight I was at after my military training period.
One philosophic point to the Q of less than six months to live. Make sure your wishes are documented and well known. Stop worrying and starting living! If some of your children ask the tough question of why did you ...? My answer is to help all of you make meaningful, positive, true decisions. But I don't care what you do or how it turns out because I will be gone!
I have visited a few places of renowned adventure in fun, not normal tourist trips. I haven't been around the world but I have been to Iceland several times. The last time almost got me, I got a infection at the Blue Lagoon (The cooling pond--hot tub--for the power station.) Then we spent two weeks in the Highlands of Scotland with over half of my family. My wife and I spent two weeks in New Zealand touring the North Island. We could have spent two months and not seen it all. I been to most of the 50 states, again, not all of them. All of the lower--border--provinces of Canada. Depending on your ability to move around, do thing and go places you can enjoy!
If you are a Star Wars fan, be a Jedi, not a Sith! Focus on the good (people, things, and life in general) in life.
Two ways to live: "Win-Win" and "Win-Lose". Chose the Win-Win and live!
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9 Reactions@rollingf and all... Well, you are an interesting fellow. Congratulations on your wonderful life experiences and outlook on life and death. Iceland, New Zealand are 2 parts of the world I never met in person, but surely would have loved. I have a Scot heritage, the Monroe Clan, and love that beautiful country. And the people! I lived in Scotland, England when I was 1 year old for about 2 years. Learned to speak with a strong Scottish accent and still revert to the English/Scot sounds if around someone with the accent. Natural. Can not control it at all.. I have my tiny little kilt and cap I wore to school... Our family went by freighter after WWII to England for my father to get his PhD at Edinburough. Apparently, quite a time to be visiting. Terrible shortages, rationing sugar, coal, and so much more... Life was very difficult for the UK and my parents as well. But, I learned to talk there, obviously enjoyed my time as a toddler.
My father and I planned to visit but life here got in the way. So, I should have beamed up Scotty, visited my heritage.
Yes. Win-Win is the prime choice. I am finding through the years we have some control in the choices, but surely it is limited. Our choice is how we handle, accept, move forward with the status of our lives... as I perceive things. I find much else is out of my reach. But!!!! With a bunch of determination, pure grit, focus, acceptance and guts, I am somewhat successful with leaning in the win-win column in the way I deal with what's given. Think that's the best available to me at this time...
Blessings, Elizabeth
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2 ReactionsYou may call me crazy - but I’ll throw out this idea nevertheless.
I’ve been to funerals and celebrations of life (after the death) and wonder, “who picked out this music to play?” It doesn’t sound like the songs of the person I knew. Just a jumble of elevator music or common religious music.
So, I’ve started a meaningful playlist that if I were at my funeral 🙂 these are the songs I’d choose. My sons will know where to find the playlist - and I’m fine if they don’t want to use it, but my guess is that these songs will “speak” to them as well. I named the playlist “At Last”.
Includes songs like Tapestry by Carole King, Sunshine on my Shoulders by John Denver, Somewhere over the rainbow by Kamakawiwo’ole, and Home by Blake Shelton.
We’ll see how many decades this music will span in the end.
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7 Reactions@triciaot I agree with the song idea.
I have also made a list of songs to leave my sister, my only living immediate relative. Songs that are uplifting to help her heal, to know that as long as she has a memory of me I will always be with her and to know it is not tragic that I am gone, only sad, and that their is a time for everything.
Barbara
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3 Reactions@triciaot Not crazy at all. For my end-of-life doula role, I have actually compiled a list of songs for reference; not infrequently people request recommendations to be played by their bedside, some for funerals, for Celebrations of Life, or solace for memories.
Among my preferances on my own list are Fields of Gold by Eva Cassidy (with a strong personal connection there as she died at a young age from melanoma) for my husband, Songbird by Christine McVie for my children, and New Day Will Rise by Yuval Raphael for my grandchildren. Many people aren't familar with the last song, so I'll post the lyrics:
And even if you say goodbye
You'll never go away
You are the rainbow in my sky
My colors in the grey
My only wish upon a star
Sunshine in the day
The only song that my piano ever plays
And even if you say goodbye
You'll always be around
To lift me up and take me high
Keep my feet close to the ground
Are you proud of me tonight
Dreams are coming true
I choose the light
Nothing to lose if I lose you
New day will rise
Life will go on
Everyone cries
Don't cry alone
Darkness will fade
All the pain will go by
But we will stay
Even if you say goodbye
New day will rise
Life will go on
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8 Reactions.