Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dying doctor tried to find meaning as his life ran down

- BY RASHA MADKOUR

“When Breath Becomes Air” by Paul Kalanithi, Random House, 228 pages, $25.

In his posthumous­ly published “When Breath Becomes Air,” Paul Kalanithi gets straight to the sudden turning point in his life: the day the Stanford neurosurge­ry chief resident looked at a scan showing he had advanced cancer and likely little time left.

What follows is a poignant account of his life, his quest to find meaning, his efforts to retain his humanity in the grind of becoming a doctor and, ultimately, his thoughts on dying.

As he and his wife, Lucy, grapple with whether to become parents in their remaining time together, she asks him: “Don’t you think saying goodbye to your child will make your death more painful?”

He replies: “Wouldn’t it be great if it did?”

The heartrendi­ng exchange captures Kalanithi’s full-throttled approach to living. One summer while in college, he applied for an internship at a research center as well as a job at a lakeside camp; he was accepted at both and had to choose. “In other words, I could either study meaning or I could experience it.” He picked the latter.

It is no surprise that Kalanithi chose the incomparab­ly demanding field of neurosurge­ry. His reflection on the practice, responsibi­lity, idealism and fallibilit­y of medicine is a must-read for those in the field and those touched by it. When facing brain surgery, “the question is not simply whether to live or die,” Kalanithi writes, “but what kind of life is worth living.” Would you trade your right hand’s function to stop seizures? Would you trade your ability to talk for a few extra months of mute life?

In the gravest of cases, Kalanithi writes: “I had to help those families understand that the person they knew — the full, vital independen­t human — now lived only in the past and that I needed their input to understand what sort of future he or she would want.”

Despite his close contact with death, it was a dizzying change from doctor to patient. “As a doctor, you have a sense of what it’s like to be sick, but until you’ve gone through it yourself, you don’t really know. It’s like falling in love or having a kid,” Kalanithi writes. Ultimately, he made a decision: “Even if I’m dying, until I actually die, I am still living.”

He worked on building his strength to go back to the operating room. While working 16-hour days, he battled “waves of nausea, pain, and fatigue,” but his calling as a neurosurge­on was a strong draw.

A reader can’t help but feel deep regret that Kalanithi — the unusually introspect­ive doctor, the intellectu­ally driven scientist and the compassion­ate humanitari­an — no longer walks this Earth, sharing his gifts. His book is faint consolatio­n.

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