None of us likes to think about what our last days will be like. But if we do think about them at all, we want them to be full of peace and tranquillity, with the chance to say proper goodbyes to those we love. Life in a Hospice takes readers behind the scenes of end-of-life care, to see the very great efforts of nurses and others to provide the calm that we all hope for.
This might sound like a depressing book, but on the contrary, readers have found it to be inspiring and uplifting.
‘An easy-to-read book, which will surprise many readers with its lightness of touch, humanity and refreshing tone. I would recommend it to anyone who has worries about their own or a relative’s care at the end of life.’
Dr Nansi-Wynne Evans, GP
‘The simple reflections on complex areas of care resonate long after you have finished reading the book.’
Cancer Nursing Forum Newsletter
Royal College of Nursing
Ann Richardson has been a writer for many years. She is fascinated by other people’s thoughts, experiences and emotions and loves to write books where they can express their views in their own words.
She writes on different subjects that capture her interest for one reason or another. This includes a book about people living with AIDS or HIV thirty years ago when there was no cure (Wise Before Their Time, Foreword by Sir Ian McKellen); a book about what it is like to work in end-of-life care (Life in a Hospice, Foreword by Tony Benn); and a book about how it feels to be a grandmother (Celebrating Grandmothers).
Her most recent book. The Granny Who Stands on Her Head: Reflections on Growing Older, is a set of short pieces about the joys and challenges of becoming old, with an emphasis on the joys. It is also partly a memoir, including some stories from her life.
Ann lives in London, England, with her husband of 58 years.
Please visit her website www.annrichardson.co.uk
People who work in end-of-life care need all sorts of strategies to cope with their work. Most find some way to leave their worries at work. This nurse describes how her husband would respond if she told him honestly about her day:
Book Excerpt
Life in a Hospice: Reflections on Caring for the Dying
My husband is helpful and supportive. He knows what happens in here, but he doesn’t want to hear the gory details and I don’t need to tell him. I could sit him down and go through a catalogue of what I do in a day and he would need a whisky at the end of it. So I will have the whisky and he can just go to work! I don’t think it would be fair – he doesn’t bring his job home, I don’t bring mine home.
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