Eastern advice on how to help
the dying
I have had no experience with helping the dying. My
grandparents and a few other friends and relatives died in my
lifetime but I was too young and not skillful enough to help
them at the times of their deaths.
The content of this article has been sourced from
The Tibetan Book on Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche.
This is a modern classic and introduces the Tibetan Buddhist
tradition in a way, which can be applied in our modern,
westernized world. The chapter titled Heart Advice on Helping
the Dying is itself worth 50 times the cost of the book. To
obtain your copy please click on the link above.
A person at the time of his or her passing is in such a
situation that he or she is leaving behind all that he has
clung to and been familiar with all his life. Wealth, fame,
prestige, family, friends, power all is being left behind.
Rinpoche asks us to put ourselves in the place of the person
who is dying. He asks us to imagine ourselves on an ocean liner
or a journey to the unknown. You have no choice in the matter,
the ship is already on its way out and our friends and family
are on the shore to wish us goodbye. What would we want from
our friends who had come to see us off in that situation?
Remember you can never come back and that you have no choice,
you have to leave. With a little use of the imagination we will
be in a better position to help the person at the time of
death.
Sogyal Rinpoche gives a lot of important advice. I have
attempted to summarize some important points in this article.
For more detailed help please read his book.
1. At the time of death give the person room to express her
feelings. Allow her to express any and all her feelings. The
person will feel fear, panic, grief, rage, in different
proportions. By allowing her to express those feelings, by
empathizing with them we can offer immeasurable help.
2. Give the suffering person permission to die. Rinpoche
speaks of persons whom he had met or heard of who were
approaching death. But they were burdened by their
responsibilities, by the fact that their family depended on
them. Sogyal Rinpoche says that many dying persons refused to
let go and suffered many weeks of suffering and agony. By
giving such a person permission to die his family would make
his passage much easier.
3. Establish trust and open communication; be yourself. Your
job is to behave naturally and let the person open up. Use
humor skillfully in such situations. This will establish better
communication.
4. Do not interrupt, deny or diminish the person’s feelings.
The person needs to feel and express his feelings. This is the
way he can be free of them and meet his end peacefully.
5. Do not intrude your spiritual beliefs. Do not try to
convert or impose your spiritual beliefs on the person. It will
not help. On the other hand if the persons expresses a wish to
learn about your beliefs, do not hold back.
6. The dying person may make you the target of his grief and
rage. This is not unexpected. The person is in the deepest
crisis of his life. Don’t take it personally if he takes out
his feelings on you.
7. Do not expect too much of yourself. This is only so much
that you can do. In the ultimate analysis people will die as
they have lived. Do not expect miracles.
8. Technique to help you empathize:- Rinpoche says that
dying persons long to be touched, long to be treated as living
persons and not as diseased. A great deal of consolation can be
given to the very ill simply by touching their hands, looking
into their eyes, gently massaging them, holding them in your
arms or breathing in the same rhythm gently with them.
Rinpoche also describes two techniques for feeling and
expressing unconditional love towards the dying. Very often,
due to past issues and sufferings, we may have feelings of
guilt and anger towards the dying. Rinpoche says that if you
try to put yourself in the place of the dying person you will
have a better idea of what the person needs and feels. You will
then be in a position to accept the dying person
unconditionally.
On to the next chapter on Dealing
with loss after death of a loved one:
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