Weekend Herald - Canvas

Janet Mikkelsen

Funeral director and a trustee of Sweet Louise

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I don’t remember making specific promises to Louise during her illness. I was always honest with her and she would ask for my opinion on medical things. I know she trusted me to care for her, and that I would be there for her when she needed me. I’ve learnt how strong the human spirit is. I’ve worked with families in terrible situations that none of us would ever wish to experience and what amazes me is how they find the strength to go on, to enjoy life again, to laugh. So many times I have heard people say that if they had known what was going to happen to them (lose a child, get terminal cancer etc), they would have thought they would never cope with it ... but they do. When you have to get on with life and the really tough times, you do find a way. My work has taught me to take each day as it comes. None of us knows what is around the corner. And also to value and be grateful for what we do have. I think attitudes to illness have changed, not only to cancer. People want more informatio­n, be completely informed about the options available and to have opportunit­ies to take some control themselves. All the advances and successes in medicine, though, have also created some unrealisti­c expectatio­ns — that everything can be defeated through treatment or a positive attitude. If being strong and positive could cure people, I know plenty of wonderful children and adults who would still be alive. It is hard sometimes to accept the randomness of cancer. What I think can be very unhelpful is the idea that something is to blame for the cancer — particular foods, the environmen­t, stress and so on. My understand­ing is that it is much more complex than that — why one child in a family has got cancer when all siblings have eaten the same food, been in the same environmen­t, been exposed to the same amount of stress. It means we can’t reduce it to one thing and, for people with cancer, it is really unsupporti­ve to have them think they could have prevented it by some simple factor in their life. The thing I value most in my life is people — my children, my family, friends but I also get sustained by the natural world — I love taking my dog for a walk along the beach, listening to birdsong, seeing a beautiful sunset. Being able to experience those things and spend time with the people that are important to me is what my life is about. I think that our generation, who are now planning the funerals for their parents, tend to want options, so that is what we are offering now. We have lots more options around embalming or not, eco-friendly caskets and burials, cost effective options, people spending time at home more, funerals taking place in a variety of places by a variety of people — so overall a lot more emphasis on the individual rather than doing things a specific way. I can think of lots of examples of uplifting and inspiring things I’ve heard and seen at at time of death and dying, but one that has always stuck with me was a little Korean girl I was caring for who died of a brain tumour. She lost the ability to talk so could communicat­e by using a thumb-up, thumbdown system. Whenever she was asked about being scared, sad, upset, angry and so on, she would always reply in the negative. The only thing she ever said was that she was bored, so we organised more music and books for her. The uplifting or inspiring thing was that she trusted and loved the people around her to care for her so much that she had no fears. She was beautiful, open, trusting and filled with joy at any little thing people did for her, which was a real lesson in how to live. Sarah Daniell

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