After sustaining a severe heart attack in 1973,
my grandmother sank into a deep coma
and was placed on life support systems in the hospital. Her
EEG was totally flat, indicating zero brain activity. She was
hooked up both to a pacemaker that made her heart beat
artificially and a respirator that made her lungs breathe
artificially. But technically, as the doctors told me privately, she
was basically as good as dead. "She'll never come out of the
coma," they said, "and she's better off this way. If she did, her
life would be meaningless. She'd exist in a purely vegetative state.
Even though she was in her mid-seventies and had lived a full
life, I refused to believe that my beloved grandmother could
simply slip away like this. She was too feisty, too vital to just
disappear into a coma. My instincts told me to start talking to
her and keep chatting away. I stayed at her bedside day and
night, and that's precisely what I did. I spoke to her all the
time about my husband and our two small children, about other
relatives, about her own life. I told her all the news that was
circulating in Australia at the time. Anything and everything was
grist for the mill. I also kept urging her to keep clinging to life,
not to give up. "Don't you dare leave us!" I exhorted. "I need
you, Mom needs you, your grandchildren need you. They're
just beginning to get to know you. It's too soon for you to go!"
It was hard for me to do battle for my grandmother's life, alone
as I was. During the time that she fell ill, I was her only relative in
Sydney. Her daughter (my mother) was away overseas on a trip,
and my only sibling -- a brother -- lived in Israel. My husband was
home caring for our children so that I could take my post at her
bedside. I stood a solitary vigil, but that was not what placed
such tremendous pressure on me. What was enormously difficult
was being asked to make decisions alone. The emotional burden
was huge.
When four days passed with no signs of life flickering in either
my grandmother's eyes or her hands, and no change recorded
by the EEG, the doctors advised me to authorize the papers that
would turn off the life support systems. I trembled to think that I
held the power of consigning my grandmother to an early grave.
"But she's really already dead," the doctors argued. "She's just
being kept artificially alive by the pacemaker and the respirator.
Keeping her hooked up to these machines is just a waste."
"Well, listen," I said. "It's Thursday afternoon, and in the Jewish
religion we bury people right away. My parents are overseas -- practically two days
away -- and they would certainly want to be
here for the funeral. But we don't do funerals on Saturday, the
Jewish Sabbath. The earliest we could do the funeral would be
on Sunday. So let me call my parents to get ready to fly home,
and I'll sign the papers on Sunday." It was all very cold and
calculating, but deep inside, my heart was aching.
Meanwhile, I didn't let up. I kept talking up a storm, discussing
weighty matters, babbling about the mundane. "Guess what,
Grandma?" I gossiped. "You won't believe who ended up being
your roommate here in the hospital! Stringfellow! Your next door
neighbor at home, Mrs. Stringfellow, was just brought in
with a serious condition. Isn't that a coincidence? She lives next
door to you in Sydney and now she's your roommate here in the
hospital!"
On Saturday, I was at my usual post at my grandmother's
bedside, getting ready to start a round of tearful goodbyes, when
I thought I noticed her eyes blinking. I called a nurse and told her
what I had seen. "It's just your imagination, dearie," the nurse
said compassionately. "Why don't you go downstairs for some
coffee, and I'll stay with her until you come back?"
But when I returned, the nurse was brimming over with
excitement herself. "You know," she said, "I think you may be
right. I've been sitting here watching your grandmother, and I
could swear I saw her blinking, too."
A few hours later, my grandmother's eyelids flew open. She
stared at me and then craned her neck to look at the empty bed
on the other side of the room. "Hey," she yelled, "what happened
to Stringfellow?"
By the time my mother arrived at the hospital the next day, my
grandmother was sitting up in bed, conversing cheerfully
with the hospital staff, and looking
perfectly normal. My mother glared at me, annoyed, sure
I had exaggerated my grandmother's condition. "For this,
I had to schlep all the way home?" she asked.
Later, my grandmother told me that while she was in
the "coma" she had heard every single word that was
said to her and about her. She repeated all the
conversations to me, and her retention was remarkable.
"I kept shouting to you," she said, "but somehow you
didn't hear me. I kept on trying to tell you, 'Don't bury
me yet.'"
After she was discharged from the hospital, my
grandmother's quality of life remained excellent. She
lived on her own as a self-sufficient, independent, and
high-spirited lady and continued to live in this manner
until her death sixteen years after I almost pulled the
plug.