One Saturday in May, Ryan Finley tried to wake up his wife Jill but she wouldn't wake up. The 31-year-old woman had gone into cardiac arrest in her sleep and fell into a coma. After she was rushed to the hospital, doctors said she had very little chance of recovery because Jill's brain showed little activity.
Ryan was suddenly faced with a tough decision — whether to take Jill off life support. He prepared to say goodbye to his young wife, but he wasn't prepared for what happened after the plug was pulled.
Source: ABC News
Video: LiveLeak
So did taking her off life support bring her back? :)
I haven't finished watching the clip yet, but either the anchor or her writers need an education:
"Painful," perhaps; "painstaking," whaaaa?
WTF does Jesus have to do with this?! NOTHING.
What a wonderful story tho. Very heartwarming.
December 13th, 2007 at 2:33 pm
@ XuYu
WTF does Jesus have to do with this?! NOTHING.
What a wonderful story tho. Very heartwarming"
biltmore....Jesus has Everything to do with this and one day you WILL wish that you knew this earlier in your life....
@ Kevin
Jesus sounds like a pretty loving guy if he's ok with saying "oh I'm sorry you repented one day too late. eternal damnation for you"
Aside from that, I am always surprised at how many people come out of the woodwork and post on an unrelated issue because for some reason they hate God and those who believe. (Sigh~)
How do you religious freaks see anything thru those massive blinders you delude yourself into wearing?
We don't hate god. We hate people who make decisions -- important, world-affecting decisions -- based on their beliefs in god. We hate how wars are waged in gods name. And we hate how we will never ever understand how so many people are so deluded that they care more about an imaginary being than the other people living -- and suffering -- around them.
Amen.
We don't hate God OR people who believe. We are annoyed at people who use such things as swords and shields, attacking other's beliefs or taking a superior air. I just gets tiresome. Yeah, that's awesome if you want to believe in something, but don't act like you can't even imagine why everyone doesn't agree with your beliefs.
Also, I'm not an athiest. In fact, i'm a staunch Thiest! I just respect other people's beliefs, and refuse to think my beliefs make me superior in any way.
As for technology... well... i guess if God wanted man to fly.... he would have given him.... a brain to figure out how to do so...
But wow. This woman's amazing. I'll keep the ambien thing in mind though - doctors don't know everything (I know some people who just got accepted to med. school). Afterall, they're only human.
(And I'm all for keeping loved ones alive forever on pure technology, but unless you have money, sometimes there's no choice. I suggest if you care, churches start collecting to help pay for the costs of keeping people alive on machines. It's actually pretty expensive after a while... unfortunately.)
Though! If you have a stroke and go into a coma, is that or is it not what God wants? Should you interfere with it?
Food for thought.
I'm not going to read the responses. Just putting it out there.
I agree! I do hate violence and if I could follow one person (if he were alive today) it would be Ghandi. I do think it's wrong to wage war at all, especially in God's name. It gives the rest of us a bad name who have any belief in another higher power.
God brings change to our lives at times not expected. We grow out of hardships given to us. God doesn't control everything we do or the things that happen to us. But if we are guided, then good things can happen.
Nuff said...done here.
Trying to compare the cases is like apples to oranges. I am very happy that she has recovered, and I know that other occasionally do. Like the doctor in the piece said... something like for every one of her there are hundreds who don't awaken and live in nursing homes the rest of their lives with no significant recovery.
If there's a reasonable chance that I won't be able to wipe my own ass or read or write or create or communicate when I'm "recovered" from an event such as this, I'd rather have my loved ones err on the side of withdrawing care and letting me die than allowing me to lingering in a state of persistent dysfunction.