Living Years Blog

Entries categorized as ‘Interviews’

Maybe grief isn’t so bad afterall

November 5, 2009 · Leave a Comment

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Regardless of how well we look after our health, it is a given that we will die one day. By caring for our bodies we can enjoy good health for as long as we live but we will not live on this earth forever. We all know this and yet death is  a subject many people avoid thinking or talking about.

When someone we know and love dies it is normal to feel sad and to grieve for that person. There are many different ways in which people do this. Many cultures have rituals and ceremonies around death to help those who remain behind to come to acceptance and closure.

The vast majority of people will do exactly that in their own way and in their own time-if we let them. More recently there has been ,as part of a general trend to medicalize normal human emotions, a tendency to see grief as some form of illness which requires some form of treatment.

It is interesting then to see a new book, ”The other side of sadness” which has looked at the path of many people through grief. The finding is that 85 to 90% of people cope and adapt in their own way and time without any form of treatment including formal counseling.

Is this really surprising?  People have coped with death since the beginning of mankind. Whilst counseling has a role for some people, the majority will do just fine with adequate time and the support of friends and family. When facing grief we need to be able to both enjoy memories of the god times coupled with sadness that there will be no more good times with the deceased.

What sometimes makes it tricky is that there can be mixed emotions. This too is quite normal. We might be angry or have unresolved conflicts with the person who has died. It is seen as inappropriate to be angry with someone who has passed on but the fact that they have does not in itself mean that suddenly the issue you had with them has died.  It means though that you must now come to terms with it without the other person. Sometimes we need to shake our fist at the sky or stomp our feet to release the emotion. This is not for everyone but has a valid role for some.

The key in all this is that grief is a normal human emotion. It is not a disease, which requires treatment. It is a reaction to an event such as the passing of a loved one. It is no more abnormal to feel grief in this situation than to feel joy on winning lotto yet no one would suggest counseling after the latter.

Some people will benefit from counseling if they are getting “stuck” and find themselves not able to move on with their lives. However just the knowledge that what you are experiencing is normal ,and that in most instances will be a stage from which you emerge is an empowering start point.

For more information on Dr. Joe, you can visit his website here.

Categories: Interesting Facts · Interviews · News Items · Research

Rear Vision’s Palliative Care podcast

November 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

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First broadcast by Radio National in may, 2009, this palliative care podcast covers it’s short history and practive throughout the world. Rear Vision tracks the history of this approach to dying from its origins in Britain to Australia, where the world’s first professor of palliative care was appointed.

The transcript is available here, or you can listen to it directly here: 

Categories: Interesting Facts · Interviews · Living History · News Items · Pod Cast · Research

Smoking, obesity ‘grow as world threat’

October 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

kidsTobacco and obesity are overtaking hunger and infectious disease as leading causes of death and illness across the developing world, an Australian expert has warned.

As globalisation had lifted millions of people out of poverty, Dr Paul Kowal said free trade agreements had allowed the rapid movement of processed food and tobacco products into the world’s poorest nations.

Many developing countries now faced new and mounting health threats from the expanding availability of fast food, soft drinks and cigarettes, he said.

“To increase development in a country, they are forced to open up to transnational corporations including tobacco corporations,” Dr Kowal said of the trend emerging in the world’s developing nations.

“And there is a clear correlation between the local presence of a tobacco company and increasing tobacco uptake.”

Dr Kowal holds a position on a research committee within the World Health Organisation (WHO) and is also a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Newcastle.

He spoke to AAP on Tuesday after he addressed the International Conference on Realising the Rights to Health and Development for All underway in Hanoi in Vietnam.  Dr Kowal pointed to WHO estimates that, if trends continue, there will be more than eight million tobacco-related deaths a year by 2030, 80 per cent of them in the developing world.

In 2000, the number of overweight and obese adults in the world exceeded the number of underweight for the first time.

Dr Kowal said Indonesia was a classic example of a developing country that had levels of smoking and obesity “increasing as the gross national income per capita increased” while India, China and many South-East Asian countries were on a similar path.

He said tobacco companies were known to tailor their marketing efforts in developing countries to try to reach those in the population that had not traditionally smoked – women.

They also worked to sidestep advertising bans through the sponsorship of sporting teams or by selling cigarettes “by the stick”.

Vietnam, which has one of the world’s highest rates of smokers at 56 per cent of men and two per cent of women, has moved to ban smoking in indoor public places from January next year.

Another speaker told the conference that Vietnam spent about $US77.5 million ($A84.47 million) each year on health care to treat tobacco-related diseases such as lung cancer and heart disease.

“Smoking kills, that’s pretty clear, and it has overtaken infectious disease in a lot of lower-income countries yet there is still a misconception there that infectious disease is rampant,” Dr Kowal said.

“In fact, we’re seeing a double burden of disease – non-communicable disease from risk factors like induced poor eating habits or smoking uptake is becoming a bigger and bigger problem.”

Health experts at the conference are calling on governments to increase tobacco taxes, ban tobacco advertising, improve education about tobacco-related diseases, adopt global and legally-binding codes, and limit market access to transnational corporations.

via AAP

Categories: Announcements · Interesting Facts · Interviews · News Items

A Piece Of My Father

October 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

2006_4974Some people keep their loved one’s ashes in an urn on the mantelpiece; others scatter them to the wind. A contemporary artist, however, has decided to pay tribute to his late father by using his cremated remains as part of a new artwork.

Created by London-based artist Jason Schulman, the piece comprises suspended particles extracted from the ashes of his father by use of a magnetic field – together with brightly coloured elements, which have been meticulously sorted, sieved and filtered from his father’s remains.

“My father died, he was 92, and I went to collect his ashes from the funeral director,” Shulman said. “While I was there a thought dropped into my mind from a book I once read as a child about how, if you broke the human body down, you could get something like six erasers, four pencils, four horseshoe nails and things like that. What I particularly remembered was the iron in the body for the horseshoe nails.”

After being given a tour of the crematorium and a detailed explanation of the processes that go into the cremation of the human body, Shulman took the plastic bucket full of his father’s ashes back to his studio to test out the iron theory.

“I got a huge electromagnet and sifted the remains, which are like coarsely ground coffee, and all the iron basically stuck to the magnet.”

Emboldened by this remarkable discovery, he then spent the next couple of months meticulously filtering all the colours – the greens, the reds and the blues – visible in the remains, which appear as a result of the bones oxidising.

“It’s a very cathartic process to go through and it’s quite shocking coming across gallstones or a filling,” he added. “A great anvil drops on your head at the enormity of the experience. I think I kind of connected and disconnected with him at the same time – and to be honest I’m still surprised I did it.”

The finished piece features beautiful stratified layers of colour and iron encased in a glass tube, which is precariously suspended by a thin thread above a concrete floor. If a heavy lorry trundles along the road outside the gallery, the whole piece shakes as though it could fall at any moment – effectively evoking a second level of mortality and adding a strangely human dimension to the work.

Read more about the artist Jason Schulman here.

Categories: Celebrating Life · Inspiration · Interesting Facts · Interviews

How one priest helps reassure the dying

October 15, 2009 · Leave a Comment

vatben2I have probably been in the presence of around 25 dead bodies. The first time was a bit scary – or at least I thought it would be. The reality is that once someone has died they are just not “there” – quite different from them being asleep or comatose. Inevitably it invokes a sense of sadness, personal vulnerability, and even awe.

As a priest I spend time with people who are still mentally alert and aware they are dying. My job is to help them come to terms with their death and their faith. My experiences have highlighted that people fight incredibly hard when it comes to death: the body just refuses not to breathe.

Sadly, I have noticed even those who worship regularly have a built-in resistance to preparing for death. Several people in their late 80s have asked me not to talk of death because “it is too depressing”. But being scared of death is astonishingly far from the Christian tradition. The 6th-century monk and religious leader St Benedict tells his brethren to “keep death always before your eyes”. He doesn’t mean people should go around being morbid, but they be aware of their own mortality and live accordingly.

lghtben2It seems to me that a denial of the inevitability of death means that so many things are not sorted out: goodbyes not said, wills not written, funeral arrangements unmade. It increases the stress at the very point when the bereaved cannot cope. I believe with greater openness and less collusion, death could be handled so much better.

This article was originally published by New Scientist on 10 October 2007 by Lucy Middleton.

Categories: Interviews · Living History · News Items

Jane Flemming in this week’s New Idea

October 13, 2009 · Leave a Comment

janeflemmingLiving Years ambassador Jane Flemming is featured in this week’s edition of New Idea.  In the article she talks about marriage, motherhood and her role at Living Years.  From the article:

Has family become more important to you?  And is that why you’re now an ambassador for the bereavement website livingyears.com?

It’s definitely important for the boys to know about their family and about their grandparents and who they are.  I realised I didn’t know one of my grandfathers middle names.  I have to ask my dad.  And Ian’s mum passed away so we are going to create a page for her on livingyears.com so when the twins are old enough they can read about her and know what she was like.

What exactly is livingyears.com?

It’s a bereavement care site.  It’s a site for grief councilors and for hundreds of suggestions for charities in lieu of flowers at funerals.  A page can be created when a person dies and then people can click on the particular loved one’s site and ass a memory or a thought about that person.  It can be as public or as private as you like.  It’s nice for other people with access to the page to be able to go online and read what’s been said.  It’s all part of the grieving process.

Click here to view a PDF of the complete article.

Categories: Interviews · Living Years · News Items

The importance of palliative care

October 12, 2009 · Leave a Comment

CIMG5919L to R: Kate VanderVoort, Barry Epstein and Louise Evers from Living Years.

Living Years recently participated in “TOGETHER:  Cultural Connections for Quality Care at the End of Life” Conference in Perth, Western Australia.  This conference provided an opportunity for people across the world to come together to address the issues and challenges involved in providing quality care at the end of life for all.

Over 130,000 people die each year in Australia and half of those are seen to be expected deaths. Palliative care is the active and specialist support and treatment of people with an illness that cannot be cured.  Palliative care is provided by various health professionals who care for patients whose needs exceed the capacity and resources of primary care providers.

Talking about Living Year’s participation, Kate VanderVoort said, “We had many visitors come to see the Living Years stand. There was such positive feedback from all the delegates with many taking brochures to share with their team and the clients/patients they work with.  We connected with many businesses also, such as funeral directors, coffin suppliers and people who are working at the forefront of palliative care. We know that Lifebook’s will soon become a major part of the palliative care process, across Australia.”

For more information on palliative care, please click here.

Categories: Events · Interviews · Living Years

Death in the 21st Century

October 7, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Picture 1Death isn’t always something we always want to face up to but we know that it will certainly come knocking one day. People have been dying for many years now, so what can we unravel from the experience of passing on?

As techniques of keeping people alive improve the grey areas surrounding the definition of life become murky. When does death officially or clinically occur and what role does technology play in the process? In a world saturated by celebrity and public lives, what are the effects of the media’s portrayal of death and how does this affect the nature of grieving?

In this talk at the State Library of Queensland, a group of mortal scholars gathered to present their views on taking the ultimate dirt nap.  To watch this fascinating talk click here for the video, or click on the podcast below to listen to it in full.

This story was first broadcast by  ABC Fora on 7th August, 2009.  Many thanks to the ABC for allowing us to re-publish.

Categories: Documentaries · Events · Interesting Facts · Interviews · Living History · Pod Cast

Dying to Live

September 30, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We recently came across this very moving documentary made in Western Austalia.  The ‘Dying To Live’ documentary series persuades members of 9 families, as well as several skilled and wise professionals to talk about:

  • How the 9 families coped…or didnt cope…from day one
  • The emotional rollercoaster associated with death in real life
  • Why people who chose life over euthanasia are glad they didn’t ‘check out’ early
  • The effect of what people said or did
  • How to handle fear. The patients and the carers
  • Leaving an inheritance thats more than just money
  • Preparing for a funeral…Your own or for a loved one

We were very moved by this clip on YouTube.  For more information, you can visit the “Dying to Live’” site here.

Categories: Blogs · Celebrating Life · Documentaries · Events · Inspiration · Interviews

Using voice to ease the process of grief

September 23, 2009 · 1 Comment

rachael_kohnBaby Boomers invented ‘the lifestyle choice’ but now they’re choosing a death style, the natural way of death.  Dr. Rachael Kohn interviews voice empowerment coach Ganga (Karen) Ashworth who uses voice training to ease the process of grief.

With her extensive background in teaching, Karen is highly sought after for her skills as a Conductor, Singer, Facilitator and Voice Empowerment Coach. Having discovered a passion for the music of other cultures whilst training as a classical singer and Music educator at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, Karen blends the wisdom of Ancient traditions into her work with the voice. From her training as a yoga teacher, and experience with many different healing modalities, Karen enables participants to engage sound, Mantra, voice and vibration as powerful tools for healing and personal transformation.

This interview first aired on Radio National’s show “The Spirit of Things” in July 2009. If you are unable to listen to the podcast, you can read the full transcript on Radio National’s website here.

Categories: Blogs · Celebrating Life · Inspiration · Interviews · Living History · Pod Cast