Still life : a memoir / Jeff Sutherland.
Publisher: Toronto, Ontario : Sutherland House, 2019Description: 181 pISBN:- 9781999439569
- 362.1968/390092 23
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
300 - 399 | Hanover Public Library Shelves | BIOG 362.19 SUTH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31906001149708 |
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BIOG 362.19 MARS Walk it off : the true and hilarious story of how I learned to stand, walk, pee, run and even have sex again after a nightmarish diagnosis turned my perfectly awesome life upside down / | BIOG 362.19 MUND Day nine : a postpartum depression memoir / | BIOG 362.19 PIST Ghost boy : the miraculous escape of a misdiagnosed boy trapped inside his own body / | BIOG 362.19 SUTH Still life : a memoir / | BIOG 362.19 VIGA Terry & me : the inside story of Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope / | BIOG 362.19 ZIEG Wild and precious life / | BIOG 362.196 MARS Home is burning / |
"I have what?" -- A fortunate youth -- A body cast and a caring ear -- Living while dying -- When you stop breathing -- A day in the life -- Who your friends are -- Missing movement -- "You have to buy that house" -- February 21, 2016 -- Memorials -- The abyss -- At five weeks -- At fourteen weeks -- At six months -- Thanksgiving -- Anniversaries -- A prescription for grieving -- Old beliefs -- New beliefs -- August 26, 2016 -- The living -- The good life (1) -- The good life (2) -- In the end.
"Father, husband, athlete, medical doctor, Jeff Sutherland had built a perfect life for himself and his family...then he noticed that he was losing strength in his left arm. He visited a specialist and from that appointment, he writes, "deep personal loss for some unknown reason wrapped its tentacles around me and my family." Diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease), he lost his abilities to walk and speak within two years and, confined to a wheelchair, was forced to retire from his life's work as a physician at forty-three. Not long after, he was locked in his own inanimate body, unable to eat, drink, or breathe without assistance. His meals were delivered through a feeding tube, and a ventilator controlled his lungs through an opening in his throat. The only parts of his body he was able to move voluntarily were his eyes. Despite these extreme limitations, Sutherland made peace with his disease and, surrounded by his loving family, found happiness again - only to suffer another soul-shattering loss. His eldest son, Zachary, passed alongside his girlfriend in a freak kayaking accident in the river behind the family home. "Despite everything I lost through ALS," he says, Zachary's death was worse. Yet again, through a long process of suffering and healing, Sutherland was able to accept his loss and find a renewed sense of purpose and meaning in his constricted life. His story, laboriously written on a computerized device that tracks his eye movements on a visual keyboard, is a testament to both the human will's ability to overcome unspeakable tragedy, and the power of familial love to heal incomprehensible pain. "When a negative change occurs," writes Sutherland, "we have to choose how we will face it. We can be paralyzed with fear or we can make the choice to integrate it into our lives, make peace with it, and eventually grow from it. With any change, good or bad, personal growth is the ideal outcome. It is my belief that this our soul's mission on earth."
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