At home
Fifteen minutes after the fact, a friend called me up to tell me that her mother
has died. Her mother was my patient. Her parents—kind, gentle, and who at one point told me when their hospital discharge was delayed, "Okay lang kami ah; wala problema maghulat kay senior citizens na kami"—reminded me of my own, which
made this death harder to bear. After a short word of condolences, my friend and I talked
about specifics: the death certificate, the paperwork, and so on. The consoling
will come later, after the embalming and the funeral preparations.
I told my mother the news. She knew them from her hometown. Nanay said, "There's a certain lightness to dying when you know the person was a Christian."
I told my mother the news. She knew them from her hometown. Nanay said, "There's a certain lightness to dying when you know the person was a Christian."
There is.
And my patient is home with the Lord. I will tell my friend that.
Labels: daily
2 Comments:
I wonder if there's some blog post or article out there about what relatives are to do, all the practicalities, when a family member dies. I know I have no clue about any of it: death certificates, cremation or not, funeral homes, costs and all that.
I only found instructions from the Phil. Statistics Authority on how to report deaths and a handbook for physicians regarding death certificates.
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