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Christine Szymanski, Paralyzed Artist, Starved Herself To Death (VIDEO)

HuffPost Weird News     First Posted: 02/15/12 01:17 PM ET Updated: 02/15/12 06:36 PM ET

There's an old saying that artists have to suffer, but after six years of paralysis, Christine Szymanski decided she had suffered enough.

Szymanski, 31, broke her neck diving into a shallow swimming pool in June, 2005.

An artist and teacher in East Brunswick, N.J., Szymanski was rescued by her boyfriend of six months, professional musician Jimmy Morganti, who, at the time of the accident, was planning to move in with her.

The accident left Szymanski a quadriplegic. She continued to do her art, but last fall, she made a decision to starve herself to death.

"I have come to a point in my own life where I'm struggling with the question, 'Is this life worth living for ME, or am I just prolonging my own suffering?'" is how she explained it on her blog, Life Paralyzed.

Once she decided to end her life, Szymanski researched right-to-die laws, and even considered moving to Oregon which allows some physician-assisted suicide, according to the New Jersey Star-Ledger.

She also began communicating with Jeanne Kerwin, the coordinator for Ethics and Palliative Care Services at Overlook Medical Center in Summit, who gave her tips about palliative care and how she could end her suffering.

Some of Kerwin's suggestions included having two psychological evaluations as well as consultations with lawyers and physicians.

"She did everything she could so that the responsibility for whatever happened was hers alone," Kerwin told the Star-Ledger.

But not everyone agreed with Szymanski's decision, especially her aunt, Mary Ellen Symanski, the head of the nursing department at Alvernia University in Reading, Pa.

"I was not thrilled with the information she was receiving," said Szymanski who privately tried to convince her neice not to end her life.

But once Szymanski decided to die by diet, things moved quickly and she passed away on December 1.

Among her last wishes was to have her cremated ashes mixed with fireworks and then skyrocketed over the New Jersey-Pennsylvania border this Independence Day.

"I don't know whether I can do that legally," said her mother, Louise Ruoff. "But I'll try."

 
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12:59 PM on 02/16/2012
Quadriplegia should not be a death sentence. I have been a quadriplegic since age 10 and I went on to have a complete life. I completed high school and college. I got married and hope to have children one day. I even work. Life is full of ups and downs, but we must continue to move forward to overcome obstacles. Suggesting that she did the "right" thing because "no one would want to live like this" only shows how individuals are judgmental and simply uneducated about individuals with disabilities. It also shows why an individual might feel this is the only option. However, she did not have an illness that would soon result in death. She could have lived a long, healthy, and “normal” life, full of love and happiness. It is sad she (and others) did not feel her life was worth living.
02:11 PM on 02/16/2012
I think it's terrific that you are living a full and happy life, and I know other qudriplegics who are doing the same. But people are different; that is how the world is supposed to be. Some people can adjust well to severe disability; others cannot. It is not for you to say what someone else should have decided, what choices she should have made. What mattered was how SHE felt about her situation after several years of trying to cope and receiving, I am quite sure, as much therapeutic and rehabilitative assistance as was available. Long may you live with love and happiness, but you need to overcome your own problems with being "judgmental".
10:54 AM on 02/16/2012
rest in peace Christine . I commend you on your choice . I am sorry your aunt was not more supportive I too am a nurse and understand how it is for patients like this . being paralized from the neck down is awful. Patients loose thier dignity is the big complaint I hear the most . you cant feed yourself ,you are incontinate and have to be cleaned, your limbs contort and it is painfull. you have no control when it comes to your body. imagine not being able to do the simplest of things like scratching your nose. mind you I am not advocateing this but I will support anyone who feels this way .
06:39 AM on 02/16/2012
As a paraplegic, having lost use of the right side of my body, yeah life is tough. Suicide? Yep it crosses my mind and I think that is normal emotion when you are in this shape. That doesn't mean I approve of it, but I understand some of the emotions involved. One thing I have learned from being disabled is that I am not disabled, I am otherwise enabled. I have found thing I can do an am good at in-spite of not having a "normal" body to move around in. I have found that using my injured brain, I can still donate a meaningful dialog and aid to other people. What I can't do with my body, I have learned to do with my mind. When people have questions, I can talk them through a problem. Learning is very difficult but rather than say I can't, I do, and re-do repeatedly until I have mentally learned it.

Not giving in and giving up is difficult. Remembering how you once were adds to the depression and the thoughts of taking the easy way out, simply because you know you have no future. It's just more of the same.

@Jmiller68 has said a mouthful - "Yes, there is some suffering involved, but who in life never has suffering? Isn't love greater than suffering?­!" Yeah, take the energy you use for your own misery and use it to love and help others.
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02:52 AM on 02/16/2012
Huffington Post...what a joke...unless of course you like your news/information with liberal slanted bias (and if your IQ is hovering around that of a grapefruit).
01:32 AM on 02/16/2012
Interesting comments, especially the one about having her aunt live that way and see how she feels. No doubt you are all able bodied. I have been a quad for 11 years now. The thought of suicide has gone through my head but then I think about my loved ones and what it would do to them, not to mention that God is the giver of life and a life is His to take. Yes, there is some suffering involved, but who in life never has suffering? Isn't love greater than suffering?!
12:25 AM on 02/16/2012
it will be more torturous in hell. i dont think it is or was a good idea. she suffered.
08:18 PM on 02/15/2012
This is so tragic; what is wrong with us as a country that we cannot have an honest conversation about end of life care? This woman, this beautiful human, should not have to STARVE HERSELF to exert agency over her fate. (Don't even get me going on the meddling family members.) She should have the authority to surround herself with loved ones and supporters, and under medical care, receive a painless injection and pass over. We seriously need to expand our right to die legislation in this nation. We are brutal, dishonest people that cannot handle honest talk about death, pain, suffering, and an individual's right to determine their fate.
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Catherine Girod
09:23 PM on 02/15/2012
I like you.
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Sandi K H H
08:08 PM on 02/15/2012
Thank goodness her stupid and selfish aunt had no power to stop her.Let that...person (and I use the term loosely), fall prey to such a fate and see how long she choooses to exist that way, because it's not living.
07:43 AM on 02/16/2012
Being a quadraplegic I find this remark disgusting. I fully am happy in my situation and consider it to be living. I found peace with my disability and just because individuals have physical challenges doesn;t mean we should be viewed as having a pitiful life. I broke my neck 15 years ago and have been paralyzed from the neck down since. I found the Lord 5 years ater and have now become a Rehabilittio Psychologyst who works with individuals with disabilities. And the view you've posted is the biggest challenge to my job. The hardest part of overcoming a disability that this lady possessed was not her physical challenges but her psychosocial challenges that are enhanced by world views like this.
07:57 AM on 02/16/2012
I do apologyze, this is not a personal atack on Sandy. This is an emotional subject to me. The truth is that there are so many resources available that individuals dont know about. They can produce a great quality of life for those with disabilities.