Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ex-President Carter to turn 99

7 months into hospice care at home, he defies expectatio­ns

- PETER BAKER

Maybe it’s the peanut butter ice cream he still enjoys. Or the fact that his first-place Atlanta Braves are cruising toward the playoffs and he wants to see another World Series. Or as many of his loved ones and former advisers suggest, maybe he is just too stubborn to follow anyone else’s timetable.

Whatever the reason, seven months after entering hospice care, Jimmy Carter is still hanging on, thank you very much, and is in fact heading toward his 99th birthday on Oct. 1. While nearly everyone, including his family, assumed that the end was imminent when he gave up full-scale medical care in the winter, the farmer-turned-president has once again defied expectatio­ns.

“We thought at the beginning of this process that it was going to be in five or so days,” Jason Carter, his grandson, said in an interview, recalling the former president’s decision to check out of the hospital and go into hospice care at his home in Plains, Ga., in February. “I was down there with him in the hospital and then said goodbye. And then we thought it was going to be in that week that it was coming to the end. And it’s just now been seven months.”

Jimmy Carter was already the longest-living president in American history, but his staying power even in hospice has captured the imaginatio­n of many admirers around the world. It has generated an extended farewell, one that was unplanned yet remarkably affectiona­te for a president who was turned out of power by voters after a single term yet transforme­d his legacy with decades of service that earned him the Nobel Peace Prize.

In the months since he returned to his small-town home to meet his final fate, the outpouring of remembranc­es has been heartening to his family and friends. Instead of a memorial service he could not attend, Carter has experience­d a living eulogy, soaking up tributes from around the globe. Relatives and advisers say he is aware of what has been written and said, and is deeply grateful.

“He’s got so much joy in seeing his presidency and post-presidency revisited,” said Paige Alexander, CEO of the Carter Center, the nonprofit institutio­n that served as the base for his philanthro­pic work over the past four decades. “In many ways, that keeps him going — along with peanut butter ice cream.”

Carter has withdrawn from the active life he led until not that long ago. The regular calls with Alexander are no longer so regular. What animated him for so long were not the ins and outs of the daily news but the projects he devoted his life to, like eradicatin­g certain diseases from developing countries.

“He wasn’t asking about politics or the economy,” Alexander recalled. “He just wanted to know what the Guinea worm count was.”

While Carter has good days and bad days, he has not lost his perspicaci­ty or his sometimes curmudgeon­ly sense of humor. Alexander recalled a telephone conversati­on over the summer when she mentioned his upcoming big day.

“If I don’t talk to you before your birthday, happy birthday,” she recalled telling him.

“I’m going to be 99,” he replied. “I’m not sure what’s so happy about that.”

Nonetheles­s, the Carter family, both those who are blood relations and those who are part of his longtime circle, are planning various celebratio­ns to mark his century-minus-one milestone.

The Carter Center is asking supporters to send pictures or videos that will be arranged in a digital mosaic. It collected 6,000 in the first three days, from celebritie­s like Martin Sheen and Jeff Daniels as well as everyday people from Africa and around the world. Peter Gabriel led an audience in a round of “Happy Birthday, Jimmy” at Madison Square Garden in New York on Monday night.

The next night, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation presented its lifetime achievemen­t award to Carter and his wife, Rosalynn Carter, with Alexander collecting on their behalf. The Jimmy Carter Presidenti­al Library and Museum will hold a naturaliza­tion swearing-in ceremony for new American citizens on his birthday. David Osborne, known as the “pianist to the presidents,” will perform at Jimmy Carter’s Maranatha Baptist Church.

Carter was not suffering any particular ailment that prompted him to enter hospice care in February, according to people close to him, but was tired of being in and out of the hospital and wanted to spend his final days at home with his wife. Hospice is defined as care for terminally ill patients when the priority is not to provide further treatment but to reduce pain and discomfort toward the end of life. It is meant for patients not expected to live more than six months.

Perhaps it should have been no surprise that Carter would ignore that time frame. He has been defying death longer than anyone who ever served in the Oval Office. In 2015, he beat cancer that had spread to his brain. In 2019, he bounced back from several falls, including one that broke a hip. “He’s been faced with what he thought was the end multiple times,” Jason Carter said.

He spends his days now in the house where he and Rosalynn Carter have lived since 1961, a two-bedroom, one-story rambler so plain that The Washington Post once calculated that it was worth less than the Secret Service vehicles parked out front. His children and grandchild­ren take turns visiting with them, and he has a crew of caregivers but has not seen a doctor in more than six months. President Joe Biden calls from time to time to check in.

“It’s a day-to-day thing,” said Kim Fuller, his niece. The children sometimes read him news articles, and he catches Braves games on television. “They holler at the TV and do everything you do normally when you’re watching baseball,” Fuller said.

Rosalynn Carter, the genteel former first lady who made promoting mental health a cause while in the White House, announced in May that she had dementia, and the two of them spend days together quietly, recently celebratin­g their 77th anniversar­y.

For Rosalynn Carter’s 96th birthday last month, Fuller said she organized a butterfly release at the house. Fuller said her uncle was aware of his own upcoming birthday.

“He wants to reach 99, I know that,” she said. “The last month has been different for him,” she added, but “I am just praying every day that he makes it to 99.”

“It’s a bitterswee­t one,” she added. “We’ve all been on pins and needles since February. Every day’s a celebratio­n.” But as her uncle has demonstrat­ed time and again for nearly a century, no one will dictate to him. “He’s going to do exactly what he wants to do when he wants to do it.”

For Carter, any birthday celebratio­n will be marked at home, surrounded by family.

“He’s really significan­tly limited physically, and he is coming to the end; there’s no doubt about that,” Jason Carter said. “He is, I think, frustrated by that. But he is at home. He’s together with his wife. They’re in love. They’re at peace, and you don’t get more from that. You certainly don’t get more than they got from this life. And the end is exactly how you would hope for it to be.”

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