---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: N Sekar <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Nov 8, 2025, 11:47 AM
Subject: Fwd - Why proling death, accept it gracefully
To: Kerala Iyer <[email protected]>, Narayanaswamy Sekar <
[email protected]>, Rangarajan T.N.C. <[email protected]>,
Chittanandam V. R. <[email protected]>, Suryanarayana Ambadipudi <
[email protected]>, Mathangi K. Kumar <[email protected]>,
Rama (Iyer 123 Group) <[email protected]>, Mani APS <[email protected]>,
Srinivasan Sridharan <[email protected]>, Surendra Varma <
[email protected]>


EXCELLENT ARTICLE 💐

*When the body stops cooperating, when there is no chance of recovery, do
not perform treatments on me* -Dr. Lopa Mehta

Dr. Lopa Mehta was a professor at GS Medical College in Mumbai, where she
served as the head of the Anatomy Department. At the age of 78, she wrote a
living will. In it, she clearly stated... “When the body stops cooperating,
when there is no chance of recovery, do not perform treatments on me. No
ventilators, no tubes, no unnecessary hospital commotion. My final moments
should pass peacefully.
Wisdom should take precedence over the stubborn insistence on treatments.”
Dr. Lopa not only wrote this document but also published a research paper
on death. In it, she clarified that death is a natural, inevitable, and
biological process.

According to her argument, modern medicine has never viewed death as an
independent concept. Medicine always assumes that death results from some
disease, and by treating that disease, death can be prevented.
But physiology is far more profound than that.
She argues... the body is not a machine that runs continuously. It is a
limited system with a specific amount of vital energy. This energy does not
come from some stored tank but from the subtle body.
This subtle body is something everyone experiences but cannot see. It is a
system composed of the mind, intellect, memories, and consciousness.
This subtle body acts like a gateway for vital energy. This energy spreads
throughout the body, keeping it alive. The heartbeat, digestion, and the
ability to think all depend on it.
But this energy is not infinite.

Each body has a specific amount of it. Like a fixed battery in a machine,
it cannot be increased or decreased.
“As much as Rama winds the key, that’s how much the doll dances”... as the
saying goes.
Dr. Lopa wrote that when this energy in the body is depleted, the subtle
body separates from the physical body. At that moment, the body becomes
still. We call this “the life force has left.” This process is not related
to any disease or any fault. It is the internal rhythm of the body.
This begins in the womb, progresses, and culminates in death. This energy
is constantly being spent every moment. Every cell, every organ completes
its lifespan. And when the entire body’s “quota” is exhausted, the body
comes to rest peacefully.
The moment of death is not measured by a clock. It is a biological time. It
is different for each individual.
For some, life is complete in 35 years, for others in 90 years. But both
complete their full journey.


If we do not see it as a defeat or something forced, no one dies
incomplete.
According to Dr. Lopa, when modern medicine stubbornly tries to prevent
death, not only the patient’s body but the entire family becomes exhausted.
The cost of a month in the ICU for a breath can sometimes destroy a
lifetime of savings.
Relatives keep saying, “There’s still hope,” but the patient’s body has
long been saying, “Enough.”
That’s why she wrote... “When my time comes, just take me to KEM Hospital.
I trust they won’t intervene unnecessarily. They won’t cause prolonged
suffering in the name of treatment. Do not stop my body. Let it go.”
But the question is... have we made such a decision for ourselves?
Will our family respect that wish? And will those who respect it be
respected in society?
Do our hospitals honor such wishes, or is a bill issued for every breath,
and are accusations made for every death?
This is not so simple. Balancing logic and emotions is perhaps the most
difficult task.
If we learn to see death as a peaceful, inevitable process arising from the
body’s internal rhythm, perhaps the fear of death will lessen, and our
expectations from doctors will become more realistic.
In my opinion, we should stop fighting death and instead prepare to live
before it.
And when that moment comes... face it peacefully, with dignity.

In the words of the Buddha — death is the next stage in the journey of
life. No science can make it eternal.

That’s why we must be able to observe this true state. 🙏🏼

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