Boundless
Deity
http://www.metro.co.uk/tv/reviews/8...sing-to-die-was-harrowing-heartbreaking-stuff
What you are about to watch may not be easy, said Terry Pratchett at the start of Terry Pratchett: Choosing To Die (BBC2). He wasnt wrong. Then again, such had been the fuss surrounding his film about assisted dying, no one was going to be tuning in expecting a barrel of laughs. We were about to watch a man die.
Nobody appointed Pratchett as the poster boy for assisted dying (not suicide, theres been a change of branding); rather the best-selling fantasy author has had the courage to charge himself with the mission of changing the law in Britain since he was diagnosed with Alzheimers disease three years ago. And now he was taking it to the next level, joining British businessman Peter Smedley on a trip to the Dignitas clinic in Switzerland, where Smedley planned to end his life.
Smedley, whod made a pile in tinned peas, had motor neurone disease and was determined, with old-school British understatement, to beat the worst the condition could throw at him, even if that meant death. The course of the disease is most unattractive, he observed, as if he were talking about a gaudy neckerchief. One needs to go pretty shortly.
It was brave of Smedley and his wife to allow the outside world into their private trauma. It was a decision that shone a penetrating light on the fierce debate that surrounds assisted dying and the right to determine our own fate.
That time is of the essence when it comes to assisted dying was uppermost in Pratchetts mind. Leave it too late and you lose the power of choice and he was visibly wrestling with the idea that, in order to avoid his own fate worse than death, he would have to opt out of life before it was strictly necessary. Or it might be too late. Because you cant speak.
This was harrowing, heartbreaking stuff. As the moment of truth arrived for Smedley, in a little blue house with hideous bedspreads, the clock played tricks. Strange how time has different values at different occasions, were almost his last words. Pratchett sat by, visibly shaken. But the experience stiffened his resolve to stick around long enough to see the law changed here. Though he had an opt-out clause. Id like to die outside, in the sunshine, he pondered. I suppose sometimes the sun shines in Switzerland.
Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/tv/reviews/8...s-harrowing-heartbreaking-stuff#ixzz1PH1GpxGq
This was an absolutely harrowing, and very difficult programme to watch for me - but something that I'm glad I did, especially as someone who loves Pratchett's work so much. It brought to light a lot of what Pratchett as a writer and a man goes through suffering from Alzheimer's.
Thoughts from anyone else who watched this, or would like to, or simply has an opinion on this issue in general....
Spoiler :
What you are about to watch may not be easy, said Terry Pratchett at the start of Terry Pratchett: Choosing To Die (BBC2). He wasnt wrong. Then again, such had been the fuss surrounding his film about assisted dying, no one was going to be tuning in expecting a barrel of laughs. We were about to watch a man die.
Nobody appointed Pratchett as the poster boy for assisted dying (not suicide, theres been a change of branding); rather the best-selling fantasy author has had the courage to charge himself with the mission of changing the law in Britain since he was diagnosed with Alzheimers disease three years ago. And now he was taking it to the next level, joining British businessman Peter Smedley on a trip to the Dignitas clinic in Switzerland, where Smedley planned to end his life.
Smedley, whod made a pile in tinned peas, had motor neurone disease and was determined, with old-school British understatement, to beat the worst the condition could throw at him, even if that meant death. The course of the disease is most unattractive, he observed, as if he were talking about a gaudy neckerchief. One needs to go pretty shortly.
It was brave of Smedley and his wife to allow the outside world into their private trauma. It was a decision that shone a penetrating light on the fierce debate that surrounds assisted dying and the right to determine our own fate.
That time is of the essence when it comes to assisted dying was uppermost in Pratchetts mind. Leave it too late and you lose the power of choice and he was visibly wrestling with the idea that, in order to avoid his own fate worse than death, he would have to opt out of life before it was strictly necessary. Or it might be too late. Because you cant speak.
This was harrowing, heartbreaking stuff. As the moment of truth arrived for Smedley, in a little blue house with hideous bedspreads, the clock played tricks. Strange how time has different values at different occasions, were almost his last words. Pratchett sat by, visibly shaken. But the experience stiffened his resolve to stick around long enough to see the law changed here. Though he had an opt-out clause. Id like to die outside, in the sunshine, he pondered. I suppose sometimes the sun shines in Switzerland.
Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/tv/reviews/8...s-harrowing-heartbreaking-stuff#ixzz1PH1GpxGq
This was an absolutely harrowing, and very difficult programme to watch for me - but something that I'm glad I did, especially as someone who loves Pratchett's work so much. It brought to light a lot of what Pratchett as a writer and a man goes through suffering from Alzheimer's.
Thoughts from anyone else who watched this, or would like to, or simply has an opinion on this issue in general....