Fotografía de autor
5 Obras 174 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Stephen Jenkinson, MTS, MSW, is an activist, teacher, author, and farmer. He has a masters degree in theology from Harvard University and a masters degree in social work from the University of Toronto. Formerly a program director at a major Canadian hospital and medical-school assistant professor, mostrar más Jenkinson is now a sought-after workshop leader, speaker, and consultant to palliative care and hospice organizations. He is the founder of the Orphan Wisdom School in Canada and the subject of the documentary film Griefwalker. mostrar menos

Obras de Stephen Jenkinson

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Jenkinson, Stephen
Fecha de nacimiento
1954
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Canada

Miembros

Reseñas

With lyrical prose, deep wisdom, and stories from his two decades of working with dying people and their families, the author places death at the center of the page and asks us to behold it in all its painful beauty. Die Wise teaches the skills of dying, skills that have to be learned in the course of living deeply and well. Die Wise is for those will fail to live forever.
 
Denunciada
PendleHillLibrary | otra reseña | Oct 5, 2022 |
Die Wise is a book about the skill of dying. The author, Stephen Jenkinson, is an older Canadian with some experience in the palliative [or “cloaking”] care industry. A while back he bought a farm and started something called the Orphan Wisdom School, teaching people how to grieve. He published this book in 2015.

Jenkinson starts out by getting into the failure of Western Culture surrounding the dying process. We remove the dying from our daily lives, and obscure their dying process, even from those who are dying. Not only is this extremely expensive, but rather than extending someone’s “life” in the rewarding sense of the term, we prolong their deaths. People that know what’s going on, such as doctors, widely refrain from many of the commonly used “life-extension” techniques [such as chino therapy with terminal cancer].

In many people’s dying process, they start looking for meaning. Jenkison assures us that if this is where you are, you’re too late. Meaning is something created in the prime of our lives, and cannot be found simply by dying.

There’s also a bizarre trend towards thinking of death as unexpected, and life as a right. It’s important to grieve when children die, but it’s not an “injustice” or “unfair.”

Jenkinson proposes that a lot of our problems stem from a lack of skill in grieving. Surprisingly, the antidote to our cultural and personal depression is the genuine expression of sadness.

Dying reminds us that we are not, at any point, in control of our lives.

As Westerners, we are a homeless culture. One meaning of the word homeless is that we don’t have the bodies of our ancestors buried under our feet. Jenkinson says we even “enshrine...[our] lostness as a kind of freedom.” One way you can identify when such a shift happens is when the gods of a people no longer inhabit the land in which their respective people live, but instead become removed to some other plane of reality. At the same time, Jenkinson suggests we shouldn’t be “making metaphors of ordinary things.” All of this is tied up in a process of losing our dead. The dead and the gods happen to have a lot in common, and they way we treat one constituency can inform us about our feelings towards the other.

Jenkinson points out that we never say, “you have your whole death ahead of you.” But in a way, reminding ourselves of this early in life is hearty food for the creation of a meaningful life. The more we learn of the wonder of death, the better we live.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
willszal | otra reseña | Apr 20, 2016 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
5
Miembros
174
Popularidad
#123,126
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
7

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