The Final Crossing: Learning to Die in Order to Live - Softcover

Eberle, Scott

 
9780977763214: The Final Crossing: Learning to Die in Order to Live

Inhaltsangabe

"The River Styx isn't far ahead. When it's time for the final crossing, doc, I want you there at the helm." Hearing these words from Steven Foster, hospice physician Scott Eberle unhesitatingly responded, "I give you my word, Steven. If it's within my powers, I'll be there." In a matter of weeks, Steven would be dead, having succumbed to a genetic lung disease at the young age of 64. The Final Crossing is the story of the journey these two people made together across the river that separates the living from the dead.

Steven and his wife, Meredith Little had spent nearly thirty years exploring, creating, and enacting wilderness rites of passage - a form of symbolic death. Scott had spent nearly twenty years learning to help others through the rite of passage that is physical death, and more recently he had also begun working as a wilderness guide. As Scott writes in the book, "while symbolic dying and literal dying are obviously not the same, they are deeply connected." During Steven's final days, the lessons they taught each other about symbolic and physical death -- were profound. As an old medieval prayer says, "To be blessed in death, one must learn to live. To be blessed in life, one must learn to die.

Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Dr. Scott Eberle is a physician specializing in end-of-life care, an experienced teacher and author, and medical director of Hospice of Petaluma in Petaluma, California. Having first learned the science of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco medical school, he then learned the art of medicine from countless people living and dying with AIDS in the 1980's and 1990's. He survived this difficult time by regularly seeking sanctuary, either in monasteries or in the natural world, completing more than 150 retreats during a fifteen-year period.

In 1998 he founded the Center for Wellness in Medicine, which offered experiential workshops for physicians, nurses, and others in health care. After training as a wilderness guide at Wilderness Rites and the School of Lost Borders, he expanded the Center's work to include vision quests and day walks, again focusing on outreach to people in healthcare. Soon after joining the faculty at the School of Lost Borders in 2003, he disbanded the Center for Wellness in Medicine to focus on wilderness work through this school - work he does as a complement to his hospice practice.

In 2003, during the first of the home visits described in The Final Crossing, Scott said to Steven Foster and Meredith Little "The cutting edge of my inner world right now is exploring how to merge that outdoor work and my hospice work." Some time after Steven's death, Meredith asked him to join her as a teaching partner to explore this very edge. Together they are co-creators and co-directors of "The Practice of Living and Dying," a nature-based experiential curriculum that supports people to explore their own stories about living and dying.

Recently Scott ended his 16 year career as an AIDS specialist so he could focus his medical practice on end-of-life care. As he writes in The Final Crossing: "So now I am a physician who specializes in supporting life transitions and a hospice doctor who sits with the dying in their homes, and I am a rite-of-passage guide who sits with 'the dying' out in the desert."

„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.