Trigger warning: This post deals with the themes of assisted death and suicide. If it brings up any issues for you, contact Lifeline: 131 114.
By JAMILA RIZVI.
Brittany Maynard might die tomorrow. Or she might not.
But regardless of whether her much publicised plan to die on 1 November 2014 eventuates, 29-year-old Maynard has won a major battle for the rights of terminally ill people to end their lives with dignity. She will have also made a personal choice, which should be respected and empathised with.
Brittany Maynard is living with terminal brain cancer; she is not expected to live beyond 2014. She has a loving husband, a family who adore her and countless reasons to want to stay alive. She and her family relocated from California to Oregon earlier this year because Oregon is one of only five US states whose laws would allow Maynard to commit suicide with the assistance of a doctor.
An advocate for national laws to allow physician assisted suicide, Maynard has been outspoken about her right to die on her own terms and at a time of her own choosing.
The effects of Maynard’s disease would likely see her quality of life severely limited in the final weeks of her life and even with medical assistance, her pain levels would be severe.
This physical distress would only be compounded by the devastating psychological effects of being less than 30-years-old and knowing your life could be over at any minute. Given her circumstance, Maynard, understandably, wanted ownership of her own fate. She did not to walk through the years – or what’s left of those years – that should be her shiniest, wondering when she’s going to succumb to the rapid deterioration of her own brain.