What are you proudest of in life?
What’s one story you’d like me to tell my grandchildren about you?
How strange that the journalist son failed to string together a few simple
questions just to get us started. I think I know what she would have said, but I’ll
never know for sure. I wish I could have heard her answers in her voice. I just
needed to ask.
Seeking
Context
I call these
legacy questions. They ask what we’ve accomplished or changed and
inquire about the lives we’ve touched. They are questions about meaning,
spirituality, lessons learned, gratitude, regrets, people and purpose. Most of us
think about questions like these as we move through life—especially toward the
end, when we take stock, look back, and think about what it all meant and what
difference we made. But legacy questions also ground us along the way. They
add meaning to the present and context to the future. By asking them early and
often, we take stock of our lives and check our bearings and seek balance.
What have I accomplished?
How do I want people to remember me?
Throughout this book, drawing from my experience as a journalist and the
kinds of questions I’ve asked people over the years, I’ve
examined how to seek
answers, chart a course, or pry information out of people who would rather not
give it. I’ve looked at how questions set the stage for creativity and unlock the
mysteries of people and the natural world. Legacy questions are different.
Whether you ask them of yourself or others, these questions open the door for
reflection and resolution. They seek context. They can be existential or spiritual.
Whether you are ready to think about a legacy in the literal sense or are merely
pondering the meaning of life, legacy questions ask about meaning and
gratitude, mistakes and adversity.
You gain perspective from these questions by starting at the end.
Why Didn’t I Ask?
My mother was a survivor—as were so many Depression-era kids. Her family
lost pretty much everything in the market crash of 1929. Through the early years
of the Depression, just as Mom was coming into adolescence, her family was
forced to move from place to place. They split up for a time when she and her
mother had to move in with relatives in Philadelphia
while her father stayed in
New York to find work. He finally succeeded, and they reunited, but money
remained tight. The jobs were not secure. Her mother went to work too, in a
settlement house, but died soon after—of acute appendicitis, most likely—when
Mom was just sixteen.
Still, my mother finished public high school in New York City and, egged on
by her outspoken aunt, went to college. That was not something a lot of young
women did in 1938. College was no escape, however. She was a student when
Pearl Harbor shook the planet and pulled America into world war. Shortly after
her graduation, her beloved fiancé, an army doctor,
diagnosed his own brain
tumor. He died before they were to be married. I’m convinced Mom never quite
recovered. That Paris trip was a rare escape.
Mom got a job as a social worker, earning $35 a week. That’s when she met
my dad. They married but were from different worlds. Mom’s family had been
in America for generations and was educated and established. Dad’s family was
first generation, poor, and barely literate. She grew up with role models. He
grew up on his own. She was outspoken. He had not yet found himself.
Mom bore the second of her three children in a taxicab as they raced across
Manhattan to Lenox Hill Hospital. Lora, born premature, brought something else
to the family, Down syndrome. Over the years, her disability became another
flashpoint between them. My parents’ marriage ended badly, bitterly.
Life was seldom serene and never settled. Mom, always a fighter, battled
what she called the “system” to gain education and independent life for Lora.
Though she
clearly was proud of her kids, she always found something to
criticize. But as difficult as she was at times, my mother also was smart and
quick and could be wickedly funny. Mom judged everybody with a profane blast
that made us wince. “Asshole!” she would shout if the driver ahead of her was
turning too slowly. “Idiot,” she’d comment if the pharmacist failed to fill the
prescription properly.
Mom and I had our own rip-roaring fights. But we could also sit and talk
about the world or human nature for hours on end. She had opinions about
everything. My youngest sister, Julie, and I were with her at the end. At about
2:30 in the morning, the hospice nurse came in and turned her a bit. Mom
opened her eyes and said, “Peace.” It was the last word she spoke.
When I went back a couple of days later to thank the hospice staff, I asked
the social worker how many people have a meaningful
conversation where they
come to terms with one another and what they’ve done in their lives. Do they ask
about their lessons learned, resolve some regret, or celebrate their life story?
“Not many,” she told me. “Not many.”
The Rabbi
Not long after Mom died, and purely coincidentally, the Hospice Foundation of
America asked me to host a video for a continuing education course for end-of-
life professionals. I didn’t hesitate. The course involved interviewing clinicians,
hospice workers, physicians, social workers, and spiritual care providers, asking
them about research and best practices. They shared their experiences and their
stories.
While interviewing these experts, I discovered a common theme. These
remarkably
caring people, who so clearly see life as a journey and death as an
inevitable destination, were uncommonly good listeners and superb questioners.
They told of conversations, sometimes with difficult patients or fractured
families, that helped people come to terms and grieve, but also to appreciate life
and find a narrative—a legacy. Questions served as part of the therapeutic
toolkit. Asking people about their fears and concerns, about their quality of life
and their accomplishments invited intensely personal and revealing reflection.
One of the most memorable people I met, Rabbi Gary Fink, dealt with the
big what and the why questions every day. As the spiritual care adviser for
hospice in Montgomery County,
Maryland, this soft-spoken man with the gray
beard works with people who occupy all parts of the religious spectrum, from
those who find comfort in faith to those who reject religion altogether. Still
others, he told me, create their own spirituality or approach mortality in a
fatalistic way.
Gary Fink never judges. He never rebukes or asks if a patient believes in
God. Instead he asks:
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