Remember To Love

On Monday January 27th, there was a federal roundtable on Advance Requests for euthanasia. Some of your colleagues participated. While I was speaking with one of the physicians who will be participating, she passed on a great analogy about advance directives. She said: 

It’s like asking your child what they want to be when they grow up, and then holding them to it.

We all recognize that people are going to change as they grow and develop and that holding a five year old to their desire to be an astronaut is not practical, nor is it fair. When you are five, you don’t have all the information and your thinking changes as you experience life. But that growth and development doesn’t stop when you turn eighteen or twenty-five or indeed eighty-five. Life continues to shape all of us.

The best we can do is to ask someone we trust to share our journey and help us make the best decisions at the right time for our care at every stage. 

With that in mind, I invite you to watch this newly-released 4-minute video, “Remember to Love”, featuring Joan, a woman living with dementia.

Categories

Recent Posts

You Might Also Like

  • By: Nicole Scheidl on April 8, 2025

    CPL hosting a Panel on Euthanasia in Canada at Civitas. Civitas is a membership-based, non-profit organization that exists “to promote and deepen understanding through the exchange of a wide range of political, economic, social, religious, cultural and philosophical ideas concerning the principles and traditions of a free and ordered society.” CPL is pleased to be

  • By: Canadian Physicians for Life on April 8, 2025

    Not MAID for this The impact of euthanasia on family members is rarely discussed. But this is precisely what we need to do to combat the hyper individualism that would suggest our consequences have no bearing on others.  Christopher Lyon watched a doctor end his father's life under Canada's medical assistance in dying (MAID) program.

  • By: Nicole Scheidl on February 19, 2025

    Advocating for the Elderly According to the Government of Canada, abuse affects between 4 and 10% of older adults in Canada. Since only an estimated one in five incidents of elder abuse comes to the attention of those who can help, these figures are likely an underestimate. Older adults may suffer harm, including: physical

Follow US:

Want to become a member?

YOUR HELP GOES A LONG WAY!

Vital Bylines: Get news and opportunities weekly from CPL.