Hidden Brain - The Ventilator
Episode Date: November 20, 2019Many of us believe we know how we'd choose to die. We have a sense of how we'd respond to a diagnosis of an incurable illness. This week, we have the story of one family's decades-long conversation ab...out dying. What they found is that the people we are when death is far in the distance may not be the people we become when death is near.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
In 1950, a three-year-old girl from Tennessee contracted polio.
Within days, Diane O'Dell couldn't walk.
Then she couldn't breathe.
Her life was saved by a miraculous, monstrous device.
The iron lung.
You are listening to the breath of life, as it is pumped by these tank respirators called iron lung. You are listening to the breath of life
as it is pumped by these tank respirators
called iron lungs.
Over the years, new types of respirators
allowed many polio patients to escape
the iron lung.
Not Diane.
She had a spinal condition
that made it her only option.
So she stayed flat on her back and capsulated from the neck down in the long, noisy, cylindrical
tube for 58 years.
In an interview shortly before her death, Diane said people often had the same blunt
reaction about what they would want in her situation. In an interview shortly before her death, Diane said people often had the same blunt reaction
about what they would want in her situation.
Most of them said, I'd rather be dead.
I couldn't live that way.
I'd rather be dead.
Nobody would rather be dead.
They think it's the spur of the moment,
but there's always tomorrow.
There is always tomorrow.
Diane saw her choice very differently than the people looking in from the outside.
It's one thing to say you would not want to live for 58 years in an iron lung.
But that is not the choice that confronted Diane.
The choice was always, do you want to see tomorrow?
Today we look at how one family grappled with the same question.
Over the decades, they talked deeply about the choices they would want to make
in the face of an incurable illness or terrible injury.
But when the time came to act on their beliefs,
they discovered a question they hadn't considered.
What if the seemingly rational choices you prefer
when you're healthy no longer make sense to you
when you're actually confronting death.
Life, Death and our future selves
this week on Hidden Brain. The great dining hall at Kenyon College in Ohio looks like the interior of a church.
Stained glass windows, soaring arches, huge oak tables.
This is where John Rinca first met Stephanie Bowman.
Stephanie came strolling in with this magnetic force
behind her.
And her hair was long and auburn, and she was striding,
and she looked very confident.
It was 1969.
John was a senior, Stephanie a freshman.
A few days later, John ran into her again at a frat party.
They started talking over beers.
The conversation flowed and never really stopped.
By the end of the evening, they'd shared a kiss
and made plans to see each other again.
Just really, really fascinating and beautiful
and different from anybody I'd ever met.
And I just wanted to be around her.
John was a force himself. He was one of the top college basketball players in the nation,
which was extraordinary because he was only 5'9".
But he had a special gift, focus and an immense capacity for hard work.
He was known for his offensive skills and killer jump shot.
That year was magic for both of them.
John set a scoring record that remains on the NCAA books,
averaging more than 40 points per game. Stephanie reveled in the feeling of
being on her own for the first time. They were thriving. Both felt it. After
graduation, John moved to Boston for a coaching job. Stephanie made regular
trips to see him. Maybe she was concerned about me being out there,
you know, single in Boston.
I don't know.
What John did know was that Stephanie made him happy.
Stephanie decided she'd rather be with John
than in college.
She wanted to elope, and John agreed.
On an April morning in 1971,
they walked into Cambridge City Hall and said their vows before
a justice of the peace.
She was impulsive.
I was game.
I loved her.
All I knew was that I wanted to be around this person because I thought life would be
full.
John was 22.
Stephanie was 19. The fullness of life lay before them.
Four years passed. It was now 1975.
John and Stephanie had left Boston and were living near Washington, D.C.
to be close to Stephanie's ailing father.
Stephanie was now a nurse. She worked in a hospital on a kidney transplant unit.
John taught English and coached basketball
at a local high school.
Over the Christmas holidays, they flew to Milwaukee
to celebrate the New Year with the Rinca clan.
John hoped the visit would ease lingering tension
around their city hall marriage.
John's dad had not been happy about it.
On New Year's Eve, they all went out for a big dinner. And when we got home, turned New Year's,
dad went to bed, Steph said, I'm gonna go up.
I stayed up with my mom and talked.
Quarter to one, my dad walked into the room
and said, I feel awful.
He was pale and struggling to breathe.
Luckily, there was a nurse in the house.
I went and got Stephanie.
Stephanie came in and,
Mr. Iggy, Mr. Iggy, get down on the floor.
And he was almost ready to pass out,
so she got him down on our dining room floor.
And she said, quick, call 911, call 911.
John's dad stopped
breathing. Stephanie started CPR. I could hear it pounding one two three four five
six seven eight nine ten then she breathed one two three four five six seven eight nine and she just kept at it you know just kept at it till they came and relieved her. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
That night, Stephanie saved John's father's life.
But on the ambulance ride to the hospital, he suffered a second heart attack
and then another one in the ER, which led to a stroke.
Finally, the doctor stabilized him.
But as the family gave thanks,
Stephanie pulled John aside.
She warned him that his father
might be forever changed.
This is where I heard quality of life,
and this is where I heard her
espound about people,
there's a point where people's life
isn't worth living.
And of course, these were shocking to me to think about that. That's where I really
started to look at this and I looked at my father and I thought, wow, okay, what's
his life going to be like? Chester A. Rinca lived for another 10 years, for
which John is grateful. But the energetic baseball coach, the vibrant history
teacher, he disappeared that night in the hospital.
The man who reemerged was frail and vulnerable.
It imprinted on me even more this idea of what happens
after these moments when medicine can intervene successfully.
The experience marked the beginning
of an ongoing decades-long conversation between John and Stephanie.
They began to consider what it means to save a life at all costs.
The questions they were discussing have long occupied patients, families, ethicists, and philosophers.
What makes life worth living?
Is there a point at which you can be alive, but not really alive?
Who decides when you reach that point?
What if my definition of quality of life is different than yours?
Over the years, there were other times when Stephanie and John's musings on life and
death became urgent and real.
Stephanie's father died of a heart attack.
They lost a son right after he was born.
They got to see life at its worst, but also at its best.
They had four healthy sons.
Stephanie loved being a mom and John felt
he'd found his calling as a teacher and a coach. They moved a lot but to them it
was always an adventure. By 1995 they were living up in the mountains of North
Carolina in an area known for both its beauty and poverty. Their old farmhouse
looked out on a two-lane winding road. We're just about half a mile from what was called Laurel Gap.
One Saturday afternoon, John was puttering around outside.
Stephanie and the boys were inside.
Suddenly, a car sped by going way too fast.
And then I heard the squeal of the tires,
and then I heard the, you know,
very clear and obvious crash into a tree.
Stephanie heard it too.
She flew out of the house and ran to the car.
Inside were three teenagers.
The two up front were okay,
saved by the airbags. But the young man who had been in the back hadn't been wearing a seatbelt.
And he was wedged underneath a dashboard.
Stephanie realized immediately that the young man's head was bent down to his chest in a way that meant he couldn't breathe.
So she had to decide, now she told me how conflicted she was
with this, she had to decide if I remove him from this position so that he can
get air, am I going to cause permanent damage to what might be broken, neck
probably.
Stephanie did what she'd been trained to do.
What most of us would do in a moment like that.
Do whatever it takes to try and save a life.
Get to tomorrow.
She moved slowly to get him out
so that he could breathe,
and then she sat there and held him
until the ambulance arrived.
But after the emergency crews left, Stephanie didn't celebrate.
All she could think of was this, John,
I hope he's not paralyzed.
I just hope he's not paralyzed.
I hope I didn't make it worse.
Some weeks later, John was at work one day
at the local high school.
And this kid came up to me while I was standing in the hall and said,
please thank your wife for saving my life.
It was a young man from the car crash. He'd not only survived, he was fine.
It was the happy ending they'd all wished for.
It showed John and Stephanie that heroic medical measures to save a life often do make sense.
Stephanie had given another human being decades of tomorrows.
There were other times, however, when Stephanie worried that the miraculous tools of modern
medicine produced more harm than good.
In her work with patients, Stephanie saw cases where medicine saved a life, but left a person
in unending pain or on permanent life support.
When was the suffering too much?
We discussed euthanasia, you know, because she had witnessed a lot of things in which
she thought, you know, it might have been better for that person to die.
Stephanie was always clear on what she would want
in the same situation.
She didn't want to live if it meant
her quality of life was gone.
She would say, John, just shoot me.
Don't ever let me get to that point.
Just shoot me.
I heard that.
I heard that.
I don't know how many times. She said the
same to her oldest son Jason even when he was just a kid. Whenever we would
discuss somebody that she'd seen in the emergency room or seen in the hospital,
I distinctly remember her telling me, I don't ever want to be like that. I don't ever want to end up like that.
Okay, Mom.
So it was clear. Everyone in the family knew it. If, for some unlikely reason,
something terrible happened to their strong and healthy mother, if her quality of life was gone, if she was unable
to live with dignity, they should let her go. That was what she wanted.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
It was now 2008.
Stephanie was 56 and John was 59.
They had moved yet again, this time to Wilmington, North Carolina.
John was still coaching and teaching. Stephanie had a nursing
job two hours away in Raleigh. She worked weekends. One Sunday evening in June, John
was reading in the living room, waiting for his wife to return. When she walked into the
house, he says, she didn't bother with the greeting. She got right to the point. John, there's something wrong with my speech. I said, no there's not. No John, there's
something wrong with my speech. I can feel it. I thought, well Steph, I can't hear it.
I mean, trust me, if I heard it, I would tell you.
Okay.
Stephanie let it go.
But clearly, it was still on her mind.
Whenever she had a free moment, she would go online.
And try to diagnose what this could possibly be.
An endocrinologist found a benign growth on her thyroid.
But when Stephanie asked if it might be causing the speech problem,
he responded bluntly.
No, no, no. That's either mycidnia gravis, multiple sclerosis, or ALS.
None of those options was good.
ALS seemed like the worst.
It's a fatal neurological disorder that eventually shuts down muscle control,
including the ability to walk, talk, even breathe.
But it's extremely rare and affects men more than women.
The odds were in Stephanie's favor.
Still, even the idea of it terrified her.
One night, as she was driving to Raleigh, she passed a billboard for the annual walk
for ALS.
And she called me immediately.
I said, hey, Steph, what's up?
John, what if I have ALS?
I said, calm down.
No, John, what if I have ALS?
And I could hear the panic in her voice.
I kept saying, oh, Steph, really, think about the odds.
Come on.
Let's just see.
And I did my rational thing that I had always done with her.
I laid it out, what the odds were.
I'm doing it for myself as well.
And but that had told me it was on her mind.
They knew they'd have to keep searching for answers,
but decided to wait until after Christmas.
Finally, in February 2009, Stephanie made an appointment
with a neurologist.
John remembers that drive to the clinic.
She's extremely somber,
and she's listening to this mournful music.
The music was from Warren Zivon's last album, which he made as he was dying. You know, this is a haunting mood, let me say that.
The neurologist had two tests planned.
One is done with electrodes on the surface of the skin.
And they run a charge and they see
what the reaction to that charge is.
That measures that reaction.
The neurologist didn't detect any problems.
Steph has this tremendous sigh of relief, as do I.
And then we get to the other test in which they run a probe subcutaneously and
then registers with an electrocurrent response.
The doctor started on Stephanie's right leg.
And she inserts the needle and runs the charge. And Steph goes, how was that one? She goes,
good. She goes up to the next point on the right leg and she inserts the charge.
And Steph goes, how was that one? Well, not that good. She goes to the third
insertion.
that good. She goes to the third insertion. And Steph said, how about that one? No, not good.
The neurologist continued inserting needles into Stephanie's abdomen, arms, even below
her tongue.
And got this full array of slow registration of muscle response.
Stephanie was sobbing through the rest of that.
She was just sobbing, trying to muffle.
Then the neurologist delivered the words they knew were coming.
She believed Stephanie had ALS.
Stephanie had ALS.
There's no hope. And every day, you get worse.
John and Stephanie drove home
and started calling family.
Stephanie was eventually diagnosed with a type of ALS that affects swallowing and speech
first.
She was told she most likely had somewhere between two and five years to live.
So in typical Stephanie fashion, she got on with the living right away.
She made a cross-country road trip with her two older sons, Jason and Matthew. She took a cruise to the Caribbean
with a friend.
And then when she came back, she got in the van and took two of her sons down to Florida.
And whenever they could, John and Stephanie went to a beach right near their home.
A beautiful beach, Fort Fisher. You could walk it for miles. And that she loved. She
just, that was her church. This year, you can walk it for miles. And that she loved.
That was her church.
John had to make some changes as well.
He retired from his job
and got a long overdue hip replacement.
He wanted to be healthy and strong for his wife
because he was going to be there for her
every step of the way.
He knew exactly what he was aiming for.
The most comfortable life, enjoyable life,
until it's time to die,
and then making sure she died with dignity.
Most of that first year after the diagnosis was good.
It was nearly impossible to tell that Stephanie
was dying. The only signal that something was wrong was her speech. People could now
hear what for so long only she could hear. What did you notice about her speech?
Oh, slight slurs. Just slight slurs. You know, like one too many drinks slurs, you know, nothing significant.
But as the months wore on, she began to have trouble swallowing.
We were more and more buying frosties and milkshakes, yogurts.
They asked their sons to come home and live with them.
Because she wanted her sons around them, so they were all in the house. In
August of 2010, 16 months after Stephanie received the diagnosis, she and John went
on a cruise. Near the end of the trip, they spent a day on a little island. John
sat on the beach while Stephanie snorkeled. He knew it was probably the
last time she would ever do this. She stayed out a long time, just floating there in the warm blue water.
It was kind of one of those moments that made you feel good and made you feel sad at the same time.
When they returned, Stephanie had a catheter placed in her chest so John could give her twice daily infusions
of an experimental drug.
Her swimming days were over.
She was getting weaker and thinner.
But still, they were together.
John remembers with pleasure their aimless afternoon drives.
And we would play Stephanie's music.
She loved to listen to Richie Hayden's. Freedom, freedom, freedom.
By the end of 2010, Stephanie could no longer really talk. But they still went to the beach.
John would hold her arm, and Stephanie would search for shark teeth.
I would bend down and pick it up and show it to her and she'd either nod her head or she made, she was making sound, you know, like that, you know, like a slurred speech of yes or no.
And if it was a, if it was a shark tooth, I'd put it in my pocket. We ended up with over 7,000 shark teeth by the time this was over.
On one of those beach outings the winter of 2010, Stephanie was walking a few steps away from John.
Suddenly, she toppled over.
I was stunned because I had never seen her fall.
She couldn't throw her hands out.
She just fell. The best description would be as if you tipped over a sack
and there was a thud and a jar as she hit.
And it was like a totally helpless fall.
It's hard to imagine what it was like for Stephanie
losing control of her body.
John tried to keep everything positive, to focus on what was good in their lives.
I was very reticent to make anything that was uncomfortable brought to her attention
at that time.
In John's mind, there was no need of it. We weren't dying that day.
Everything was positive, everything was for comfort, and everything was for peace.
There was not talk about death.
There was not talk of death.
That conversation they'd been engaged in for decades receded.
In fact, the only time the subject was raised was when they attended ALS clinics at the
hospital.
Every time we were there and the subject of living will came up or, you know, death arrangements,
it was a question asked, would you like to go over your arrangements?
She'd say no.
She'd shake her head no.
And they wouldn't go there, you know.
So that was a little bit of a surprise to me.
But again, I was hanging my hat on.
She knows what she's going to do.
It was one thing to talk about end of life issues
when they were hypothetical.
All those years of conversations they'd had
were earnest and serious, but they were intellectual.
Now, death was in the room with them.
Talking about it no longer felt brave and rational. It felt cruel.
The abstract had become vivid and that changed everything.
It was also the case that there was little time or space to sit down and have an actual conversation.
Everyone was overwhelmed by the daily challenges that kept piling up.
John and Stephanie's youngest son was still in college.
Bills kept pouring in,
the medical equipment required tending,
and Stephanie kept getting sicker.
Among other things, she was losing weight fast.
When it became critical, in February 2011,
she had a feeding tube inserted.
Every two hours, I was feeding her.
You know, there's just so much.
And amidst all this, you want her to be comfortable.
The feeding tube had been a big decision.
Some ALS patients choose hospice,
where the focus is on controlling pain and suffering,
not extending life.
But Stephanie was still smiling at John's awkward efforts at nursing, and they were
still taking those long walks on the beach.
She'd have her long tube tucked in her pants, and when we got back from our walk at the
beach we would get in the car and I drove off to the side and I'd get out and I'd
fix up the liquid and that would feed her.
One of the biggest challenges turned out to be not the feeding tube but the mucus.
As the disease took its toll Stephanie had a harder and harder time swallowing
and coughing. Those actions need muscles too. So fluids and mucus simply flowed
down her throat, sometimes into her lungs.
Because she had no gag reflex, she would grab a tissue and put it down in her throat as
far as she could go and then let the tissue moisture suck it up.
She would throw it in a box and accumulate dozens and dozens of tissues because she would
do that until she felt she was clear.
John says the fact that Stephanie would do this,
put her own hand down her throat to clear out the congestion,
was a clue if he'd been able to see it.
I didn't see how much she wanted to live.
And I think, to be honest with you,
she was not preparing herself for death.
All of her effort went into her living. And I'm not going to say she was afraid to die.
I'm going to say she wanted to live.
And there's a big difference.
She wasn't working out of a panic.
She was working out of a determination.
In a way, she had always been like this.
Her son Jason remembers when he was in the fifth grade
playing in a baseball game.
His team was down something like eight to nothing.
He went to bat.
And there was his mom waving her hands
and acting like victory was within reach.
It was completely out of proportion
to the stakes involved and what was happening in the game.
And that was pretty much her in a nutshell.
There was always a chance to do something up until the end.
So maybe in Stephanie's mind,
she thought there would be a way
to turn this disease around.
Maybe a new drug or a clinical trial with positive results.
The thing is, you never know for sure what is going to happen.
Sometimes you save a kid from a car crash and he is paralyzed from the neck down.
Another time, the kid you save shows up a month later, totally fine, and thanks you
for saving his life.
But in that moment when you have to decide what to do,
you don't know which way it's going to go.
You have to guess.
The Rinker family had to make one of those guesses on a
Wednesday at the end of June 2011.
John and Jason were watching TV.
Stephanie was in her recliner.
She seemed to be struggling to clear her throat.
Jason asked if she was
okay. She indicated she wasn't.
She said no. And then Jason said, do you have to go to the emergency room? And she gave
one of her really weak thumbs up.
They rushed her to the ER. Doctors got right to work suctioning out her lungs. They were
full of fluid.
She was drowning.
As soon as her lungs were cleared, they began to refill.
And then they started running the tube down again.
John stayed close to Stephanie as a respiratory therapist cleared her lungs a second time.
The tech, or the respiratory therapist, asked her, didn't consult me, didn't say anything,
just kind of spoke over her and said, Mrs. Rinka, if we have to trach you and put you on a ventilator, do you want that?
Now this came out of the blue.
Jason Rinka was there too, not quite believing what he was hearing.
He said, you know, you're permanently going to be attached to this machine that's going
to do your breathing for you, and it's not going to be pleasant.
This was not how John or Jason had imagined this moment arriving.
But here it was.
The question that put to the test John and Stephanie's core beliefs.
The choice was clear.
Either Stephanie went on a ventilator and continued to live, or she didn't and would die.
And she nodded yes.
And that's when my jaw dropped.
Stephanie wanted to be put on life support.
What? No. I just want to say no she doesn't. No, she doesn't want that. She said yes.
The procedure would have to be scheduled. John decided he'd bring it up with her again in the morning.
Then when she woke up, she seemed to be in pretty good spirits.
And I returned to the question.
I said, Steph, I don't know if you remember last night, but they asked you if you wanted
to go on a ventilator, be trach, get a trachea, and go on a ventilator.
And I looked at her.
You didn't mean that, did you?
She shook her head yes.
In a very slow nod, I said, now let me get this straight.
You want to go on a ventilator?
Yes.
I'm in a place where I never thought I'd go.
And remember, I had prepared for death.
It was on my mind every day. So I was much further down the road than she was,
and certainly much further down the road than my sons were.
John thought that with a little time, Stephanie would choose the course she had always wanted.
But the same day, Stephanie went into respiratory failure.
She was rushed to the ICU and then into surgery.
She emerged attached to a ventilator.
I did not ever in a million years think that this would happen.
John says if Stephanie had been unconscious when they first got to the hospital and they
had asked him whether they should put her on a ventilator or choose hospice, he would
have had no doubts.
He would have said, hospice.
I would have felt like I did the right thing.
And had they done that and we got to hospice and she managed to regain
consciousness, I would have talked to her and I would have told her what was
occurring and I think I could have kept her peaceful and I think she could have
left in dignity peacefully and not having brought upon her self and her family just misery.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. Jason Rinker has asked himself many times why he didn't follow his mother's longstanding
instructions on what she wanted at the end of her life.
She had seen too many patients in misery.
Don't let that happen to me, she'd said.
But at the hospital, it was almost as if he didn't have one mother, he had two.
There was the rational mom, the experienced nurse, and then there was the mom who was
fighting for breath, wanting to live until tomorrow.
Jason knows why he stayed silent.
We weren't ready.
And she wasn't either. What I didn't consider at the time was that you might never
be ready until it's to an unbearable point.
This is hindsight. At that moment, they were all caught up in the momentum of what was
happening. While Stephanie was recuperating in the hospital, John and the boys prepared
the house. They turned the dining room into what looked like an ICU.
There was a hospital bed, tubes and monitors,
a generator, and medical supplies.
We had all the gauges that read our vital signs.
There was a blood pressure reading.
There was a heart rate monitor.
There was a O2-SAT reading from her
from her finger that was constantly monitoring her oxygen saturation in her
blood.
Three weeks after she was hooked up to the vent, Stephanie came home. An entourage
came with her. For the first three days,
insurance covered the cost
of round the clock respiratory care.
It gave everyone time, not enough, but some,
to learn how to monitor the new machines
and to suction out Stephanie's airways.
She was able to communicate a little using an iPad.
On the fourth day, the vent team packed up and left. One nurse, Paula, remained on duty.
Well, it was about, let's say, 10 o'clock at night. We're on our own for the first time,
so we're not comfortable with anything, you know, it's nothing's routine yet.
And then, almost immediately, something went wrong.
And Stephanie, her O2 set starts to drop.
What does that mean?
Her oxygen saturation in her blood.
OK, so we better suction her.
The suction device was not easy to use.
It demands that you, of course, dislodge the trach,
and you run the tube down her trachea but there is a hole at
your thumb that you have to cover to create the vacuum. John tried to suction
her out. The nurse tried too. Nothing's happening we're not getting any
we're not getting mucus through it.
Stephanie's oxygen levels kept dropping.
All four sons were in the room now.
Jason was standing near the end of the bed, watching, but unable to do anything.
And at some point, she started, I guess it was like choking, although with the trach it's somewhat different.
And she started to turn blue.
John dialed 911.
He frantically tried to explain what was going on.
The Rinkas lived near a local firehouse, so help arrived quickly.
Two firefighters and five medics poured into the small room.
So they were kind of squished near the end of the room. So the room, I believe, had 11
people in it.
By that point, Stephanie's oxygen had nearly bottomed out. She needed desperately to have
her lungs cleared. But the medics couldn't figure out how to do it. One of the men took the suction, and I'm trying to remember if Paula showed him, but he knew
how to get into the trach.
No, but he couldn't operate the suction tube because he said it wasn't one like, I'm not
used to this kind of suction tube.
There was a pause, as if I was expecting somebody else to say, oh let me see it, or
someone else to have an alternative, which I can't imagine what it would be. And when
I sensed that there was no reaction to that, that's, for want of better terms, I kind of
lost my temper. I said, give it to me. I probably didn't even say
it that nicely. Give me it. I have this weird determination, anger.
Finally something gave way. The suctioning began to work. They got the
mucus out. So we put her immediately back on the ventilator, the trach was hooked up,
her airway was clear, so she was now breathing again. Her oxygen levels quickly went back to normal,
her color returned. As quickly as the crisis had started, it ended. The EMTs packed up.
One of them patted John on the back as he left.
I didn't look at them.
And I went back into my room.
I sat down.
I had one of those office swivel chairs.
I leaned back and I said, What the hell have I done?
What the hell just happened?
What is going on?
What did I just do?
Did I save a wife?
No. I brought a person back to this life.
For Jason Rinca, one of the hardest parts was the realization that tomorrow would be even worse.
To know that the day that you happened to be on
was the best that it was gonna be.
And that that would be the case for the next day
and the next day, that it would always be,
the moment that you were experiencing
was as good as it would ever be again.
After that night, Stephanie lived on,
kept alive by machines.
But something had changed.
She didn't use her iPad anymore.
She didn't watch TV.
I asked doctors, do you think there was brain damage because she lost so much oxygen?
Eh, we don't think so.
It was that long of a time, blah, blah.
I can't believe that. Every day, they don't think so. It wasn't that long of a time, blah, blah. I can't believe that.
Every day, they did what needed doing.
John would play music and hold Stephanie's hand.
He would talk to her about their sons.
She would just lay there in a kind of half stupor.
I would come in in the morning at five with my cup of coffee,
and I'd sit down and say, good morning, sweetheart.
And I would sit next to her and I'd put her hand
in my hand and hold it.
And she could lift her hand, like from her elbow,
she could lift her hand about six or eight inches.
And the only thing she'd ever do was would take my hand
and she'd kind of bounce it off the mattress.
And I could never figure out what that meant.
I still had that feeling.
Did I betray her?
I still had that feeling.
What's going to end?
How can we get this to end?
I still had that feeling.
How long does this go on?
Finally, in mid-October, three and a half months
after Stephanie had been put on a ventilator,
a hospice nurse stopped in to check on her.
This same nurse had come before.
Each visit, she'd spent time alone with Stephanie.
Her job was to find out whether Stephanie was ready to die.
I don't know what her methods were, but she would come out and say,
But she would come out and say it's my feeling that she's not open to going to hospice yet. On this visit she stayed with Stephanie a long time and she came
out and she said John I believe I am satisfied that your wife wants to go to hospice.
For John, the words brought relief.
He signed the paperwork immediately.
It was agreed that Stephanie would go to hospice on Monday.
They would have one last weekend with her at home.
Each of the boys spent some time alone with her. And then it was John's turn.
I sat and held her hand and told her I loved her and told her what a great mother she was
and how much fun we had. And I said, you know, it's been quite a ride that you let me ride
with you with, you know. And I did not mention death. I didn't say goodbye and all of those
things. I can assure you of that.
Late that night, a nurse came by and started a morphine drip.
Stephanie lapsed into unconsciousness.
The next day, the boys and John stayed close.
We just spent the afternoon looking at the pictures
and going through this life of a mother who loved her children
and who was adventuresome and gave them this life of a mother who loved her children and who was
adventuresome and gave them the gifts of creativity and the gifts of wonder
and you know who had a you know had an impulsive streak that they that they
learned to admire and you know was exciting and and it was just that time
you know that's how we spent our time.
On Monday Stephanie was transferred to hospice. and it was just that time, you know, that's how we spent our time.
On Monday, Stephanie was transferred to hospice.
The ventilator was removed.
Very slowly, her oxygen levels began to drop.
By the next morning, it was clear that she was near death.
John stepped out of the room while a nurse put Stephanie into a clean and comfortable
nightgown.
John had picked it out himself.
A few minutes later, the nurse came out.
Mr. Rinko, I'm sorry.
I think your wife is dead.
And I got up and I walked into the room, and she was.
I mean, you could tell right away, I could tell right away that she was no longer alive,
that Stephanie Rinca was no longer.
In the months and years after Stephanie's death, John and Jason have reflected deeply on Stephanie's final days and the choices they made as a family.
John now sees Stephanie's illness as a two-part event.
There was before the ventilator.
I would relive any one of those days.
I would relive anyone happily.
Any of them.
Pick anyone randomly.
I will be glad to relive it.
I will enjoy it.
I will savor it much as I did just then.
And then there's after the ventilator.
There's not one day, not one, after the time she said to go on the vent, not one day you
could pay me enough money to go back and visit.
Jason Rinker feels the same, but he says the ordeal has left him with some insight into
dying. I think the mistake is in thinking that we know how we're going to react to everything.
You know, if I were to ask you, at the end of your life, would you like to suffer for
two and a half years or would you prefer to go out peacefully on your own terms in hospice?
I can't imagine anyone saying, well, I would take the suffering.
But when you're in that moment, and I've thought about this
so many times, she wasn't necessarily thinking rationally.
She was thinking about, well, tomorrow,
we can deal with the trach tomorrow,
we're gonna deal with it tomorrow.
I'll have tomorrow, I'll have the next day, not right now.
Jason says that when he imagines himself confronting
a terminal illness, he understands the dilemma
his mother faced.
I know what I would say now.
I would say, I don't wanna go through that.
I don't wanna be tricked.
I don't wanna be a burden on my family.
I don't wanna suffer anymore.
I wanna let me end it now while my family still has
these memories of me.
And then I imagine being given that choice sitting across the room from my four-year-old
daughter and being asked, are you ready to leave this?
You know, across from my wife and being told that this is it.
So are you ready to say goodbye to these two people
that you love so much?
As the tools of science and medicine
have made it possible for us to extend life,
many of us believe we can make rational choices about when to use these tools and for how long.
We imagine that we will use medical interventions only to limit the awfulness of death, when
in fact these interventions may end up prolonging it.
We believe that with forethought and planning, we can force suffering to yield to rationality and logic.
Many of us succeed, but many families discover that reason is puny in the face of death.
Despite our best intentions, despite all that we know and understand, fear and confusion and love conspire to make neat choices messy and
easy decisions difficult.
We come to realize there isn't just one person inside each of us.
There are many, and these different versions of ourselves have very different desires.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura Quarell, Ryan Katz,
Autumn Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
If you enjoy Hidden Brain and would like to help us
make more episodes like this one,
please consider joining our podcast subscription.
You'll receive access to exclusive interviews you won't hear anywhere else, plus you'll
be helping to support the work we do on Hidden Brain. To sign up, go to apple.co. slash hidden
brain. Again, that's apple.co. slash hidden brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam, see you soon.