The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Accidental activist dies on her own terms

- BY MICHAEL MACDONALD

When she was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2016, Audrey Parker said she cried — for about two seconds.

Then, the vivacious Halifax woman got on with living the rest of her life.

On Thursday, Parker’s life ended the way she lived it: on her own terms.

The 57-year-old former image consultant, fashion buyer and ballroom dance instructor chose a medically assisted death, availing herself of two-year-old legislatio­n that has already been used by more than 3,000 Canadians facing unbearable suffering caused by an irreversib­le medical condition.

In her final months, Parker became a public figure, speaking openly about her death and what she said was a terrible flaw in the legislatio­n. She said the law forced her to choose to die earlier than she would have liked.

“I’ve shared every aspect of my journey,” she said in an interview last week. “By doing so, I’ve taught people about another way of dying. You don’t have to roll up in a ball and wait. I’ve had a ball. I’ve had the best end-of-life experience you could ever have ... When I was diagnosed with cancer, I had a new path.”

Originally from Wolfville, N.S., Parker left the small Annapolis Valley town for Halifax when she was 16. She was crowned Miss Halifax in 1982, attended the University of King’s College and would later teach more than 7,500 people how to ballroom dance.

Parker also worked at the CBC as a makeup artist and floor director. She raised money for various charities and managed Mills Brothers, a high-end women’s fashion store in Halifax.

“I was always good at reinventin­g myself, figuring it out and doing well,” she said last week.

In 2015, she left her husband of 15 years and reached out to friends she had lost touch with over the years.

“My friends flooded back into my life, and four months later I found out I was dying,” she said. “I just thought, ‘I’m going to have a ball. I’m going to have the best life until I die.”

She was diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer in January 2016. Doctors said her tumours had spread throughout her skeleton.

Rather than dwell on her fate, Parker decided to embrace the idea that she could enjoy the time she had left and prepare for what she called “a good death.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Audrey Parker, diagnosed with stage-four breast cancer which had metastasiz­ed to her bones and has a tumour on her brain, talks about life and death at her home in Halifax on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Audrey Parker, diagnosed with stage-four breast cancer which had metastasiz­ed to her bones and has a tumour on her brain, talks about life and death at her home in Halifax on Tuesday.

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