Human Parts

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This Is Us

Three Magical Phrases to Comfort a Dying Person

We will all face painful moments sitting next to dying people. What can we say?

Jenny Harrington
Human Parts
Published in
10 min readMar 9, 2019

Illustration: Jialun Deng

AtAt 3 p.m. on a Monday afternoon, death announced it was coming for him. He was only eight years old; his cancer cells were not responding to treatment anymore. His body’s leukemic blast cell counts were doubling daily. Bone marrow was no longer making red or white blood cells, not even platelets. The marrow was only churning out cancer cells. In a process similar to churning butter, his blood was thickening with homogenous, malicious content: cancer. And like churning butter, it was exhausting work. The battered remnants of his healthy self were beaten down by chemo. And yet, every fiber pressed on.

He was so very tired. You could see it in his eyes. At the same time, you could see his love. His love for life was front and center. His love for sweetness crystalized on his tongue in the taste of sun-soaked strawberries. His love for satisfaction could be heard in the snapping sound of a puzzle piece set in place. His love for the simple, soothing smells of lavender emanating from a medicine ball was cherished, as was the fact that he could still hold a ball in his hands. He loved life down to the core, as only an eight-year-old can, and he was doing everything he…

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Human Parts
Human Parts
Jenny Harrington
Jenny Harrington

Written by Jenny Harrington

Author, researcher, mother living on an island near Seattle. Now, notably, an international bunny smuggler. Find her struggles and snuggles at www.teamewan.com

Responses (477)

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I was just reading this in bed while laying next to my wife; I was crying hard enough that I had to sneak out of the room for fear of waking her and having to explain. I just came back into the house after turning your words over in my mind while…

I’m so sorry. Thank you for sharing these much-needed words of advice. Your story is heartbreaking and honest…and all-too familiar. My last words to my daughter were, “It’s okay to go.” I think that helped her let go just as your loving words helped your son.