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Terry Pratchett: Choosing To Die

In a frank and personal documentary, author Sir Terry Pratchett considers how he might choose to end his life. Diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2008, Terry wants to know whether he might be able to end his life before his disease takes over.

Travelling to the Dignitas Clinic in Switzerland, Terry witnesses first hand the procedures set out for assisted death, and confronts the point at which he would have to take the lethal drug.

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  1. It is now 2022 and I have been preparing myself for several years for the possible eventual desire to end my own life to avoid what I saw my brothers go through at about and over 90. I am 89. It has taken me all this time to dig up enough information to now be able to end my own life when and if I feel it appropriate. This doco has confirmed EVERY aspect of my investigations and I am now prepared. Without the confirmation of the various methods and reliability and practicality of it all I may have had minor doubts. This doco has settled my mind to mean that the nitrogen bag is the way for the average person should choose if they are similarly inclined. This doesn’t mean I am about to suicide but it gives me the option … the choice which is denied me in mainstream life. I shall now accumulate the various components and store them. IF I die due to some other unpredictable cause I won’t be unhappy But in the meantime I will be relaxed and prepared for a good death if I begin the slide into Dementia and or Alzheimer’s or whatever. Palliative care hopefully will never be on my cards. It’s reassuring to see that my investigations led me to decide on exactly the list and spcifications that are herein included as well as in ANGELA MERCY”s post.

  2. NITROGEN IS THE EASIEST WAY TO DIE. NO DOCTORS. NO PAIN. NO INJURY. NO DRUGS. NO SHAME.

    Disclaimer: The following information is for the euthanization of pets. Please be careful. It works the same way on humans. If you are working with nitrogen and start to feel light-headed, IMMEDIATELY TURN OFF THE NITROGEN AND MOVE TO AN AREA WITH OXYGEN. BREATHE DEEPLY and the feeling will go away as you increase oxygen to your brain.

    I have created a flyer for pets who are terminally ill. I have handed them out at Alzheimer’s and ALS fundraising walks. Most people are very thankful to get the information. In it, I include the following:

    “As an eternal being, you choose when to take on a physical body and you also have the choice when to leave it. It is no one’s decision but yours.
    Even Jesus is attributed with saying, “I lay down my life—only to take it up again. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again. This authority I received from my Father.” John 10:18
    When you decide that you are ready to leave your body, you deserve to have access to a method that is quick and painless. You can do it with something as simple as what you are already doing as you read this–breathing nitrogen.
    Nitrogen (N2) is an inert gas that makes up 78% of the air. Your body is not sensitive to it like it is to carbon dioxide. As you breathe pure nitrogen, which replaces the oxygen, you gently pass out within two minutes and your body stops functioning within five minutes. If you have someone agree to remove the apparatus after you pass, because there are no drugs or injuries, it will appear as though you died in your sleep.”

    I then include what you will need to acquire or have someone provide for your pet:

    “WHAT YOU WILL NEED
    Welding supply store:
    Tank of nitrogen (about 20 cubic feet)
    Nitrogen regulator with Barbed outlet attachment
    Hardware store:
    Wrench for attaching regulator to tank
    Vinyl tubing (10 ft.) Bring outlet attachment to make sure tubing is the right size
    Exit Bag (watch Doing it with Chi…Making an Exit Bag on Vimeo)”

    “INSTRUCTIONS FOR USING THE NITROGEN TANK:
    Assemble regulator to tank, tighten with wrench, add barbed outlet, and then vinyl tubing. Turn the valve on the top of the N2 tank to listen for leaks and ready the gas flow. If you hear leaks, tighten the regulator coupling to tank.
    Screw in T handle (some regulators have a built in knob) to regulate gas flow, but do not release N2 yet.
    Press the air out of the exit bag while it is on the crown of your head.
    Insert the end of the vinyl tube into the deflated exit bag on top of your head.
    Turn on nitrogen by turning the T handle or knob on the regulator.
    When the exit bag is inflated, pull the bag over your head and make the elastic snug around your neck. Keep the tube in the bag to keep the nitrogen flowing.
    Relax and breathe deeply. You will gently become light-headed and pass out.
    Feel a sense of relief as you are welcomed by loved ones who have passed before you.
    Have fun at your funeral!”

    Personal opinion:
    I think it is a great blessing and privilege to be able to be with a loved one when they exit their body. Hold their hand. Let them know how much they are loved. Assure them through the process. It is beautiful!

    I know many mediums and near-death experiencers. Through them and reading afterlife accounts, I have learned how amazing it is to experience what comes after life in the body. I am so excited for people as they are dying because I know that they are about to embark on an amazing adventure. I know that they are still able to interact and guide us after they have transitioned. I have prepared a nitrogen tank for myself in the event that I may want it.

    Love, Live, and Let Die

  3. While of sound body and mind, people should be able to fill in a form that indicates (across many benchmarks) what their acceptable requirements for a life worth continuing to live are.
    Should a time (for any reason, be it accident, illness or other circumstance) those bench marks be no longer attainable and not able to be re attained, the person should have the right to be euthanized as per their wishes when they filled in the form.
    Then they can live their lives, free from the fear that they will become unable to make the decision or carry it out when life no longer has enough value for them to continue living.
    The only thing we ever truly own is ourselves and no one should ever interfere with our right for self determination.

  4. So terribly sad. I feel, especially, for the wives and mothers and fathers. Like the doctor said, it’s the ones left behind who suffer when their loved ones are gone. Peter’s suffering is over, but now his wife is alone, and she will probably always feel that she should have done more to convince him to stick around longer. It’s a terrible dilemma.

  5. I think that anyone who opposes PAS has never WATCHED someone fight for their life. A lot of people have known someone who has died, or gone to a funeral, I’m sure – but how many have sat in the same room as someone waiting? To watch them, completely gone from the world and laying there in endless pain, fighting to breathe with a cold glossed look in their eyes, with nothing to do but wait for their body to finally give in. It just sounds terrible, now imagine what it must look like, or feel like. Even after they take the tubes off and shut off the machines, they body can still go for hours on it’s own accord, waiting to finally give in. I’ve watched someone die before, it’s not pretty to sit there for 20+ hours knowing that it could be over in minutes if it were legal here, if it were possible to make the decision for them. Watching family or friends dying isn’t something I want for anyone, but I think it would open more people’s eyes to why PAS should be our right as human beings.

  6. I was Andrews friend,he spoke to me just before he took the dying drug. I knew him a long time,it was right for him and although I lost a very special friend who I will never forget I was happy to say goodbye, he told me he was OK and his last words to me were *shake the world by its shoulders, I love you, I will always be there when you need me, I’ll see you on the other side little lady* to know Andrew was to know a angel, a sincere,loving,sensitive soul who believed in free spirit and peoples rights. To support assisted suicide is giving Andrew his
    dream of freadom for people.
    Please support assisted suicide. To know what suffering is ahead of you is cruel. I have a rare head cancer that can’t be cured, I will follow Andrew, and think of this, we would never let a pet suffer like we do our fellow man………..WHY
    God bless Andrew and Mr Smedley ,I’m sure you are both free from pain and in a much better place. X

  7. Alzheimers is a tricky disease. Know one can know for certain if they have it until an autopsy and someone digs through your brain and sees the spider web look that happens to the neurons under a microscope. Dr. Linus Pauling I know was curing alot of people of “Alzheimers” a long time ago by just giving them lots and lots of water. And it would turn out they didn’t have Alzheimers at all. I just worry that if people have the option to go when they want they’ll miss opportunities to perhaps heal themselves. They’ll think its over when maybe it never was. Its their life again though.. I don’t know.

  8. I have now seen this documentary for the third time. Its something about it that makes me come back to it. Its honest,peaceful,brutal and beautiful at the same time… May every human with sickness in there lifes get the opportunity to choose!

  9. I’ve never understood religious people who look down on or mistrust people of no faith. You’re a good person because you think someone is keeping score and is going to reward you for your good behavior in an afterlife. I’m a good person because my parents raised me to care for others. I don’t do good because I think I’m earning heaven points, I do it because it hurts my heart to see another human suffer, and since I think Earth is our only life, the best thing you could do with yours is help others to improve theirs. I am a good, honest, decent person who does what is right expecting NOTHING in return and I’M the one who isn’t trust worthy?

  10. I don’t think it’s the way that would serve me and the people around me in the best way. But I strongly belive in everyones right to make the choice themselves.

  11. a good documentary,shocking and thought provoking regardless of the religious and moral aspects of the subject.i dont think i would make that choice but i think people should have the option.then again people already do have an option to suicide.its effectively the same thing no matter what the justification is or the label we put on it.
    as for people who say the smart thing is to not believe in god (no matter which god u refer to)these days,all i can say is this.i may be a fool and believe in something that is false and i will never be rewarded for my faith.i may spend my whole life believeing in soething that doesent exist.i may die and just dissapear and that will be it.so i may be wrong about my faith my whole life.but reagardless of that,i wont lose anything by believing.now,if you are wrong,and im right,how much have you got to lose?

    • I doubt you chose to believe, and I know I never chose not to believe, so it doesn’t really matter who is right or not right now. Because no one has chosen sides

      • well u are right on that part.i did not chose to believe.i was raised into it.just like everyone else that follows a faith.however,i do have a choice.that is to continue or not,believing.so its prety much the same thing the way i see it.on top of that,-and i dont know how this is gonna sound-i  have a tendency to distrust people with no faith.it doesent matter to me which faith they follow and what they believe in,as long as they believe in something thats better than themselves.not believing in anything,to me anyway,means that those people may have no conception of right or wrong in a way.there is nothing to limit their ego’s so to speak.and that usualy leads to bad things.either for themselves or for others around them.and believing in “science” does not qualify as a belief in my view cause science is manmade and has alot of flaws,just like the people behind it.im talking about science as a “religion” now,not about science in general.i may be wrong,but thats how i see it 😉

        • 1stly. I’m going to quote another post because i agree whole heartedly in what is said here:
          “I’ve never understood religious people who look down on or mistrust people of no faith. You’re a good person because you think someone is keeping score and is going to reward you for your good behavior in an afterlife. I’m a good person because my parents raised me to care for others. I don’t do good because I think I’m earning heaven points, I do it because it hurts my heart to see another human suffer, and since I think Earth is our only life, the best thing you could do with yours is help others to improve theirs. I am a good, honest, decent person who does what is right expecting NOTHING in return and I’M the one who isn’t trust worthy?”
          2ndly. As it happens I’m not religious at all but i’ve been called spiritual. I don’t believe in a god at all and personally its because i grew out of imaginary friends around the time i was 10. I’m also a big fan of Science. Although i don’t worship science as a religion, i do believe it will tell us more about our ancient heritage than some book that was supposedly written hundreds of years after the events of which its written about.
          And 3rdly. I am going to quote YOU and explain why i think your comment was wrong.. (Which might seem obvious. But the fact you believe in imaginary people at your age tells me that explanations ARE in fact necessary)
          “not believing in anything,to me anyway,means that those people may have no conception of right or wrong in a way.there is nothing to limit their ego’s so to speak.and that usualy leads to bad things.either for themselves or for others around them.”
          Most wars and terrorist acts are done in the name of religion, Honestly i think it just might be safer to believe in nothing. I’ll admit my ego has no limit, But i assure you my friends and many strangers have found me to be very trust worthy. I would also like to point out that ALL humans make mistakes in their life, not just those of us who chose not to believe in a god of some sort. Now dont take this post as an attack on people who believe, as i dont judge. But i cant help replying to a post that says I’m an untrustworthy individual purely because i’m not a believer. I’ll make you a deal. If all religious people stop killing in the name of religion and i’ll stop calling you all religious fanatics “delusional”. Hows that fair?
          Now for a bit of a laugh >
          Lets make religion history
          Now if you need a little bit of prodding to change your beliefs, try watching this….

          Also i think your gramma sucks.

          Sway

  12. As a graduate student in gerontology, I have always supported physician assisted suicide given the proper context.  But who can define when it is acceptable and when it is not.  It is difficult to draw the line at physically deteriorating diseases when those with profound mental illness should not be discounted.  Pratchett says it well, “When you consider all the ways a person can die” this method is seemingly dignified.  I really enjoyed this documentary and will always support PAS.  The question remains: Who owns our body?

  13. As a graduate student in gerontology, I have always supported physician assisted suicide given the proper context.  But who can define when it is acceptable and when it is not.  It is difficult to draw the line at physically deteriorating diseases when those with profound mental illness should not be discounted.  Pratchett says it well, “When you consider all the ways a person can die” this method is seemingly dignified.  I really enjoyed this documentary and will always support PAS.  The question remains: Who owns our body?

  14. As a graduate student in gerontology, I have always supported physician assisted suicide given the proper context.  But who can define when it is acceptable and when it is not.  It is difficult to draw the line at physically deteriorating diseases when those with profound mental illness should not be discounted.  Pratchett says it well, “When you consider all the ways a person can die” this method is seemingly dignified.  I really enjoyed this documentary and will always support PAS.  The question remains: Who owns our body?

  15. As a graduate student in gerontology, I have always supported physician assisted suicide given the proper context.  But who can define when it is acceptable and when it is not.  It is difficult to draw the line at physically deteriorating diseases when those with profound mental illness should not be discounted.  Pratchett says it well, “When you consider all the ways a person can die” this method is seemingly dignified.  I really enjoyed this documentary and will always support PAS.  The question remains: Who owns our body?

  16. I don’t know that i approve of assisted suicide. But then, even in my darkest hour (to this point) i have not honestly contemplated such an act. I can not say whether i would take the step towards it were i in bad health, or as the documentary puts it “weary of life,” I do however approve of those who wish to die, to have the option of making sure of it’s success.

    My heart goes out to Sir Pratchett, and i hope he finds peace in his decision however it turns out.

    •  I feel the same way. I can’t imagine making such a decision being relatively healthy, but who knows how I would feel if I get sick…

  17. I don’t know that i approve of assisted suicide. But then, even in my darkest hour (to this point) i have not honestly contemplated such an act. I can not say whether i would take the step towards it were i in bad health, or as the documentary puts it “weary of life,” I do however approve of those who wish to die, to have the option of making sure of it’s success.

    My heart goes out to Sir Pratchett, and i hope he finds peace in his decision however it turns out.

  18. amazing documentary!, very sad, but eyeopening

  19. Very good docu.
    I only wonder:  does my healt insurance cover this ? or is a gracefull exit again only for the rich at a cost of 30.000 pound ? 🙁

  20. Very good docu.
    I only wonder:  does my healt insurance cover this ? or is a gracefull exit again only for the rich at a cost of 30.000 pound ? 🙁

  21. It’s a funny thing you know, this notion of a painless and peaceful death by choice. An interesting documentary from another Eugenicist pro is How to Kill a Human Being (available on google) which explores the various methods of execution deployed in capital punishment. (the system’s choice). It’s an eye-opener but the most humane method is simulating altitude sickness; depriving the brain of oxygen via helium or similar gases. When we have our pets ‘put down’ it looks peaceful and when lethal injection is given to death row humans, it looks peaceful too. Fact is, muscle relaxants are peaceful to observe; not so peaceful however to experience when heart-stopping, ‘fire alive’ agents are subsequently administered to ensure a very painful death indeed. Don’t be fooled by appearances; put a secure bag over head or jump in front of train.

  22. It’s a funny thing you know, this notion of a painless and peaceful death by choice. An interesting documentary from another Eugenicist pro is How to Kill a Human Being (available on google) which explores the various methods of execution deployed in capital punishment. (the system’s choice). It’s an eye-opener but the most humane method is simulating altitude sickness; depriving the brain of oxygen via helium or similar gases. When we have our pets ‘put down’ it looks peaceful and when lethal injection is given to death row humans, it looks peaceful too. Fact is, muscle relaxants are peaceful to observe; not so peaceful however to experience when heart-stopping, ‘fire alive’ agents are subsequently administered to ensure a very painful death indeed. Don’t be fooled by appearances; put a secure bag over head or jump in front of train.

  23. Terry Pratchett is pro-depopulation and I do not believe this film is anything other than a promo for euthanasia. Just like abortion is tagged pro-choice, so will final-exit. Everything’s A-OK whatever unless and until The System gets involved; sooner or later the people get systematic murder at birth or sterilisation and quick-exit for the over 30’s. Sod Pratchett and his Eugenical hatchet.

      • What an ‘adult’ comment, so imbued of knowledge, wisdom and analysis. There’s no-thing ‘childish’ or ignorant in my remarks, rather astute observation. Idiot. I don’t ‘do’ this channel any more, as it does not satisfy persuit of knowledge.

  24. Does anyone who chooses this believe in God? What about God giving and taking a life? Does no one believe that anymore? I’m sorry, I believe it’s not our choice. We didn’t have a choice to be born, why would it be ours to take away? What happened to trust, faith and belief that when God calls us home we won’t be suffering? I just cannot understand how people abandon that idea all together.

    • why are we then allowed to intervene when someone is dying, in order to keep them alive?  are we also then not choosing when they die?  why are people to be kept alive artificially by machines?  for the thiestic argument of “god’s chosen time of death” to stand, we should also then abandon western medicine, and return to dark ages life expectencies.

    • Ok, be completely ignorant on the fact that millions of people suffer painful deaths every year.
      But smart people are abandoning the idea of God altogether.

      • SMART??? You mean afraid, cowardly and probably agnosttic or atheist. So if that’s the case, then I get it, I guess.

        • No, just educated and adult.

        • You’re a joke dn1529. If you think these people are cowardly, you could not be further from the truth. Fact is, a lot (perhaps not all) of these people became agnostic or atheist after a long process of research and thought about whether god could exist. I know I became one after a long and frightening realization came to me over the course of years of reading and learning about religion. That realization was not based on fear or cowardice, but simply following the logical conclusion of all the evidence presented, the diversity of the world, and the origins of religious thought.

          At the end of the day, there is no god. As frightening as that may seem, and even if that means our existence is finished with death, it is the religious that are the cowards by not allowing themselves to accept it and instead trying to rationalize contradictions in their beliefs or being happily ignorant and closing their ears to any rational discussion.

          I only wish you not allow your beliefs to block you from doing the research (as scary as the result may be) and not listening to reason (if you know the logic is sound, don’t brush it off with anger or contempt).

          • But what if your wrong?

            I myself am not afraid or a coward, I believe in heaven. I am not afraid to die. Why should I be? At the very least my belief system is there. For you have none.

          • But what if your wrong?

            I myself am not afraid or a coward, I believe in heaven. I am not afraid to die. Why should I be? At the very least my belief system is there. For you have none.

          • But what if your wrong?

            I myself am not afraid or a coward, I believe in heaven. I am not afraid to die. Why should I be? At the very least my belief system is there. For you have none.

          • If I’m wrong, I believe that if you live as a decent person and treat others with respect throughout your life, you will be ok with God. It would be quite odd for those who believe in god to have a “pass” into heaven, even if they act atrociously in life, while others who are generally good and care for the well being of others to be condemned to hell, simply because they have not accepted religion based solely on faith. If that is God’s justice, I don’t want your heaven. Arguing by saying “what if you’re wrong?” is a classic appeal to fear. I say so what. If I am, at least I had the courage to ask the question. Your belief system isn’t worth much if it’s based off of fear, rather than reason.

            As a side point, I wonder what happens to all of those people who never had the chance to learn about Heaven, say people in rural Asia. Should they be condemned to hell because they spent their life ignorant? If so, why did God put them there? Just to send them to hell?

          • I’m not scared. I think you might be though. You have an awful lot to say for someone who is very confident that good works will get you to heaven. I’m not the closed minded one. Those who only see with eyes are the close minded people.

          • I stopped taking you seriously after you said:
            At the very least my belief system is there. For you have none.
            ————————-

            If it’s not real, as I believe, why would that argument work on me? It’s the equivalent of me saying: At the very least my belief system that all caterpillars evolve into horses is there. For you have none. 
            If it’s not true, do you care? Nope. 

          • Your lost. It’s sad, but God still loves you. Please take comfort in that.

          • Your lost. It’s sad, but God still loves you. Please take comfort in that.

          • Gods are man made myths. We have an irrefutable written history as proof.

          • Ah! See, even you think God still loves me even If I believe he’s not real…and you were saying I wouldn’t get into heaven. tsk tsk.

            My final point is: 

            Don’t be afraid to question your religion, for you have nothing to fear if you’re right. If you don’t question it, it only means you fear the consequences of finding out there is no God, and that’s cowardly. 

          • I absolutely question all religion, even my own. Anyone who doesn’t would be stupid. God loves when we question things.

          • I absolutely question all religion, even my own. Anyone who doesn’t would be stupid. God loves when we question things.

          • Ah! See, even you think God still loves me even If I believe he’s not real…and you were saying I wouldn’t get into heaven. tsk tsk.

            My final point is: 

            Don’t be afraid to question your religion, for you have nothing to fear if you’re right. If you don’t question it, it only means you fear the consequences of finding out there is no God, and that’s cowardly. 

          • Ah! See, even you think God still loves me even If I believe he’s not real…and you were saying I wouldn’t get into heaven. tsk tsk.

            My final point is: 

            Don’t be afraid to question your religion, for you have nothing to fear if you’re right. If you don’t question it, it only means you fear the consequences of finding out there is no God, and that’s cowardly. 

          • Ah! See, even you think God still loves me even If I believe he’s not real…and you were saying I wouldn’t get into heaven. tsk tsk.

            My final point is: 

            Don’t be afraid to question your religion, for you have nothing to fear if you’re right. If you don’t question it, it only means you fear the consequences of finding out there is no God, and that’s cowardly. 

          • Your mother sucks cocks in hell

          • Boy, that was the most unfortunate answer you could give… And no punctuation???

          • Boy, that was the most unfortunate answer you could give… And no punctuation???

          • You can’t argue rationally and intelligently with people so ignorant they brush off irrefutable logic with such close minded arguments, so just let them go waste their life, then expecting a heaven.
            If heaven is so good, why arn’t all Christians in a rush to get there? Because deep down they know it’s not true.

          • You can’t argue rationally and intelligently with people so ignorant they brush off irrefutable logic with such close minded arguments, so just let them go waste their life, then expecting a heaven.
            If heaven is so good, why arn’t all Christians in a rush to get there? Because deep down they know it’s not true.

          • Because we know we are blessed with this life.

          • Wishful thinking, vacuous assumptions and mindless declarations, the foundation of “religion”.

          • You can’t argue rationally and intelligently with people so ignorant they brush off irrefutable logic with such close minded arguments, so just let them go waste their life, then expecting a heaven.
            If heaven is so good, why arn’t all Christians in a rush to get there? Because deep down they know it’s not true.

    • Ok, be completely ignorant on the fact that millions of people suffer painful deaths every year.
      But smart people are abandoning the idea of God altogether.

  25. “I would not like to live in a world where anyone could die more or less at any time, more or less on a whim. Maybe there are better ways of doing it.”

    I disagree, Terry. We currently live in a world like that. It’s just not having others assist you in death. It’s assisting yourself in death. Paying money for a peaceful death is a new concept, but don’t mistake that anyone would do it on a whim. Survival and death are not whimsical feelings, and your serious thoughts about the matter show this to be true.

    • I think Terry’s point was that he is afraid the idea of assisted death may be taken too far in its commercial prevalence, and as a result of the availability of it, people may not consider in full the consequences of their action. 

      I believe he simply worries people will act out of emotion and make an ill-thought decision.

      There are always options to consider if your condition is treatable (ie. if you are a depressed teenager or having a mid-life crisis, you should perhaps think of a better way to deal with it, not decide more or less on a whim). Death should be a last resort, because it will be.

    • I think Terry’s point was that he is afraid the idea of assisted death may be taken too far in its commercial prevalence, and as a result of the availability of it, people may not consider in full the consequences of their action. 

      I believe he simply worries people will act out of emotion and make an ill-thought decision.

      There are always options to consider if your condition is treatable (ie. if you are a depressed teenager or having a mid-life crisis, you should perhaps think of a better way to deal with it, not decide more or less on a whim). Death should be a last resort, because it will be.

  26. What a beautiful documentary- it was very dignified and touching.

  27. It’s retarded channel5 blocks it when i’m in the UK… ffs

  28. It’s retarded channel5 blocks it when i’m in the UK… ffs

    • I often wonder why they simply don’t give a blood thinner and allow someone to exanguinate?Perhaps a simple line in the femoral artery with a catch basin…
      Painless and clean..
      Or perhaps methadone? It is lethal in most adults at about 100 mg..and is not bad tasting in regular tang…