Terry Pratchett: Choosing to Die
- Year:
- 2011
- 59 min
- 326 Views
This programme contains scenes which
some viewers may find upsetting.
Oh, good. All the best here! It's
like being at the Ritz, isn't it?
Right, can I just change
what I say a little bit?
OK?
My name is Terry Pratchett, and I
write fantasy novels for a living.
I am 62
and I was diagnosed
with Alzheimer's
three years ago.
Sometimes, particularly
when I'm depressed,
I dread
what the future may hold.
And it occurred to me
that, in these modern times,
one shouldn't have
to fear that sort of thing.
I am talking about assisted dying,
which is currently not legal
in this country.
What you are about to watch...
..may not be easy,
but I believe it's important.
The people I will meet
in this film are all, like me,
considering how they will die.
Is it possible for someone like me,
or like you,
to arrange for themselves
the death that they want?
'Life with Alzheimer's,
at the moment,
'is full of small
but embarrassing inconveniences.
'I will forget your name almost
as soon as you've told it to me,'
because there is something wrong
with my short-term memory,
and I'm not going to make a joke
about that.
'A few years ago,
I stopped being able to type.
'Now I rely on my assistant, Rob,
'who takes dictation from me.'
..reached the undergrowth
at the edge of the dockyard...
Until THEY reached
the undergrowth. OK.
I'm very nearly finishing
the first draft of a book.
I think it's the 38th Discworld
novel. Is it?! Yeah. Bloody hell.
Was it any good? I think...
It's called Snuff. Which is snuff,
you know, the old...
In fact, I think
I've got some over there.
'But I know that the time will
come when words will fail me.
'When I can no longer
write my books,
'I'm not sure that I will want
to go on living.'
..I will stop the fight
when I deem that one man
has definitely had enough.
I want to enjoy life
for as long as I can squeeze
the juice out of it,
and then...I'd like to die.
But I don't quite know how,
and I'm not quite sure when.
There are plenty of people
in this country
who are against assisted dying,
for religious, moral
or even just practical reasons.
They fear
that we may open the floodgates
to widespread and uncontrollable
killing of the vulnerable.
'How do you guarantee
sincere consent?'
And what happens
to those who are left behind?
It's a delicate subject,
but my Alzheimer's means
that I'd like,
at least, to explore the options.
'I want to find out what it would
be like to be helped to die.'
SAT NAV:
'At 1-8 mile,you have reached your destination.'
I began by going to meet a man
who has motor neurone disease,
a terminal illness.
'Turn right.'
He had been in contact
with Dignitas,
an organisation in Switzerland
which, for a fee,
will help you to die.
Hello! Hello. Good morning!
Terry Pratchett. Christine Smedley.
Come in. Thank you.
This is my husband, Peter Smedley.
Ah, Mr Pratchett. How do you do?
I'm delighted to meet you.
Excuse me not...standing up.
No, will you excuse me if I sit
down? I'd be delighted.
Would you like a cup of tea?
A cup of tea would be very nice.
I have motor neurone disease
and I thought I would barely make
my birthday in January this year,
but... Right.
The course of the disease
is most unattractive.
And the fact
that there was no...
there was no treatment
for it. Right.
My condition has deteriorated
to a point
where I feel
I need to go fairly shortly. Mm-hm.
So you almost immediately
contacted Dignitas? Yes.
This is not an affliction that one
wants to see through to the end.
No, indeed.
It's a beastly,
undignified business, and...
..I look on Dignitas
as a...as a way out, really,
to assist me,
to be free of this affliction.
I feel, if I...
can fly free of it,
that pleases me.
I can't make any major
decision without my wife.
What do you think
about your husband's determination?
We do discuss things,
but if I don't agree,
that doesn't mean to say
that he won't do things.
In theory, at least, you're putting
yourself and your wife
in some risk.
That's the last thing I want.
I've decided
that I will not make a decision
until I'm in Switzerland,
which is entirely outside
the jurisdiction of this island.
The solicitor said,
"If Mrs Smedley accompanies you,
"it will be against the law,
and Mrs Smedley can go to
jail for 14 years."
So Peter wrote back and said,
"If it is deemed in the interests
of society,
"I'm sure Mrs Smedley
will be pleased to do her time."
TERRY LAUGHS:
Well, the whole thing
is so ridiculous.
I spent 11 weeks sitting
with my mother in intensive care
in a Sussex hospital, and she kept
looking at me and doing this.
And that had
a very profound effect on me.
I wouldn't put my dog or my cat
through...
an unpleasant, undignified ending,
and I don't want
that locked-in feeling for him,
so I'm quite supportive, really.
I think it's a better...better way
than eking it out to the end.
The thing that actually
worries me about Dignitas...
it is a kind of one-stop shop.
You go in, as it were,
and you come out in an urn. Yes.
That does not sound right.
There is something distasteful
about this.
It sounds like machinery. It does.
And that's one step away
from using the word Nazi... Yes...
..which I'm not using about
Dignitas.
And the fact that they're German...
Probably one shouldn't say that.
Well, they're Swiss, actually.
They're Swiss German.
But when you talk to them,
it's slightly Teutonic!
LAUGHTER:
Right.
Are you ready to come for a tour?
Ooh, yes. Wander round.
What was the family business?
Canning. Smedley's.
We canned everything.
Fruit, vegetables, peas.
We were the first...
You were Smedley's? Yes.
Like Smedley's Peas?
We are Smedley's Peas, yes.
Yes. I must have eaten
an awful lot of Smedley's Peas.
Yes, that's my husband's car.
He had a model made.
When I first met Peter,
he was driving this.
And he'd had aeroplanes in Rhodesia,
which is where I come from.
And my father had had airplanes
in Rhodesia,
so we suddenly had an
awful lot to talk about.
And he said,
"Would you like to drive it?"
So I said, "I would -
that would be fun."
That was not a car for driving -
that was a car for owning.
It was a car for pulling birds,
I think!
It clearly worked! And I think
he was quite successful at it!
'You walk around the house,
and things gleam and shine,
'marvellous things
collected over the years,
'and a wine cellar
that I would kill for,
'and you think, you know,
"They've got it all." '
You're up. Let me get you on the go
and then I'll take...
'You can meet Peter and think,
"Well, you're struggling a bit,
but you've obviously got money,
' "so why would you think
of assisted dying?" '
Oh, sorry.
I'll take you to the wall.
Lovely. Rather large.
They're generous in their portions.
They are.
I did fall over a week or two,
a few weeks ago,
and I found I couldn't
even get off the floor.
I'm looking for that point
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