The Wheel of Life: A Memoir of Living and Dying
The Wheel of Life: A Memoir of Living and Dying book cover

The Wheel of Life: A Memoir of Living and Dying

Paperback – June 19, 1998

Price
$12.64
Format
Paperback
Pages
288
Publisher
Scribner
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0684846316
Dimensions
6.13 x 0.72 x 9.25 inches
Weight
14.4 ounces

Description

Richard Hoffman New Age Journal An inspiring account of exploration, conviction, and service....This book chronicles a life lived passionately, compassionately, and well.Bill Williams The Hartford Courant This absorbing account of her life shows a strong-willed woman willing to challenge authority and convention at every turn. Part of the book's charm is that Kübler-Ross is a marvelous storyteller. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, MD, [1926–2004] was a Swiss-born psychiatrist, humanitarian, and co-founder of the hospice movement around the world. She was also the author of the groundbreaking book On Death and Dying , which first discussed The Five Stages of Grief. Elisabeth authored twenty-four books in thirty-six languages and brought comfort to millions of people coping with their own deaths or the death of a loved one. Her greatest professional legacy includes teaching the practice of humane care for the dying and the importance of sharing unconditional love. Her work continues by the efforts of hundreds of organizations around the world, including The Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Foundation: EKRFoundation.org. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 There Are No Accidents Maybe this will help. For years I have been stalked by a bad reputation. Actually I have been pursued by people who regard me as the Death and Dying Lady. They believe that having spent more than three decades in research on death and life after death qualifies me as an expert on the subject. I think they miss the point.The only incontrovertible fact of my work is the importance of life.I always say that death can be one of the greatest experiences ever. If you live each day of your life right, then you have nothing to fear.Maybe this, what is certain to be my final book, will clear that up. It may also raise a few new questions and perhaps even provide the answers.From where I sit today in the flower-filled living room of my home in Scottsdale, Arizona, the past seventy years of my life look extraordinary. As a little girl raised in Switzerland, I could never, not in my wildest dreams -- and they were pretty wild -- have predicted one day winding up the world-famous author of On Death and Dying, a book whose exploration of life's final passage threw me into the center of a medical and theological controversy. Nor could I have imagined that afterward I would spend the rest of my life explaining that death does not exist.According to my parents, I was supposed to have been a nice, churchgoing Swiss housewife. Instead I ended up an opinionated psychiatrist, author and lecturer in the American Southwest, who communicates with spirits from a world that I believe is far more loving and glorious than our own. I think modern medicine has become like a prophet offering a life free of pain. It is nonsense. The only thing I know that truly heals people is unconditional love.Some of my views are unconventional. For instance, throughout the past few years I suffered a half dozen strokes, including a minor one right after Christmas 1996. My doctors warned, and then begged me to give up smoking, coffee and chocolates. But I still indulge in these tiny pleasures. Why not? It is my life.That is how I have always lived. If I am opinionated and independent, if I am stuck in my ways, if I am a little off-center, so what? That is me.By themselves, the pieces do not seem to fit together.But my experiences have taught me that there are no accidents in life.The things that happened to me had to happen.I was destined to work with dying patients. I had no choice when I encountered my first AIDS patient. I felt called to travel some 250,000 miles each year to hold workshops that helped people cope with the most painful aspects of life, death and the transition between the two. Later in my life, I was compelled to buy a 300-acre farm in rural Virginia, where I created my own healing center and made plans to adopt AIDS-infected babies, and, though it is still painful to admit, I see that I was destined to be driven out of that idyllic place.After announcing my intention of adopting AIDS-infected babies in 1985, I became the most despised person in the whole Shenandoah Valley, and even though I soon abandoned my plans, there was a group of men who did everything in their power short of killing me to get me to leave. They fired bullets through my windows and shot at my animals. They sent the kind of messages that made life in that gorgeous spot unpleasant and dangerous. But that was my home and I stubbornly refused to pack up.I had moved to the farm in Head Waters, Virginia, ten years earlier. The farm embodied all my dreams and I poured all the money I earned from publishing and lectures into making it a reality. I built my house, a neighboring cabin and a farmhouse. I constructed a healing center where I held workshops, allowing me to cut down on my hectic travel schedule. I was planning to adopt AIDS-infected babies, who would enjoy however many days remained of their lives in the splendor of the outdoors.The simple life on the farm was everything to me. Nothing was more relaxing after a long plane flight than to reach the winding driveway that led up to my house. The quiet of the night was more soothing than a sleeping pill. In the morning, I awoke to a symphony of talking cows, horses, chickens, pigs, donkeys, Ilamas...the whole noisy menagerie, welcoming me home. The fields rolled out as far as I could see, glistening with fresh dew. Ancient trees offered their silent wisdom.There was real work to be done. My hands got dirty. They touched the earth, the water, the sun. They worked with the material of life.My life.My soul was there.Then, on October 6, 1994, my house was set on fire.It burned down to the ground and was a total loss. All my papers were destroyed. Everything I owned turned to ash.I was hurrying through the airport in Baltimore, trying to catch a plane home, when I got the news that it was ablaze. The friend who told me begged me not to go home, not yet. But my whole life I had been told not to become a doctor, not to talk with dying patients, not to start an AIDS hospice in prison, and each time I had stubbornly done what felt right rather than what was expected. This time was no different. Everyone goes through hardship in life. The more you go through, the more you learn and grow. The plane flight zoomed by. Soon I was in the backseat of a friend's car, speeding along the dark country roads. It was nearly midnight. From a distance of a few miles away, I spotted the first signs of smoke and flames. They stood out against a perfectly black sky. I could tell it was a big fire. Close up, the house, or what remained of it, was barely visible through the flames. I compared the scene to standing in the midst of hell. The firemen said they had never seen anything like it. The intense heat kept them at bay all night and through the morning.Sometime late that first night I sought shelter in the nearby farmhouse, which had facilities for guests. I made myself a cup of coffee, lit a cigarette and considered the tremendous personal loss inside the raging furnace that was once my home. It was devastating, staggering, beyond comprehension. The list included diaries my father had kept of my childhood, my personal papers and journals, some 20,000 case histories pertaining to my research into life after death, my collection of Native American art, photos and clothing...everything.For twenty-four hours I was in shock. I did not know how to react, whether to cry, scream, shake my fists at God or just gawk at the iron-fisted intrusion of fate. Adversity only makes you stronger. People always ask me what death is like. I tell them it is glorious. It is the easiest thing they will ever do.Life is hard. Life is a struggle.Life is like going to school. You are given many lessons. The more you learn, the harder the lessons get.This was one of those times, one of those lessons. Since there was no use denying the loss, I accepted it. What else could I do? Anyway, it was just a bunch of stuff, and no matter how important or sentimental the meaning, nothing compared with the value of life. I was unharmed. My two grown children, Kenneth and Barbara, were alive. Some jerks might have succeeded in burning down my house and everything inside, but they were not able to destroy me. When you learn your lessons, the pain goes away. This life of mine, which began halfway around the world, has been many things -- but never easy. That is a fact, not a complaint. I have learned there is no joy without hardship. There is no pleasure without pain. Would we know the comfort of peace without the distress of war? If not for AIDS, would we notice our humanity is in jeopardy? If not for death, would we appreciate life? If not for hate, would we know the ultimate goal is love?As I am fond of saying: "Should you shield the canyons from the windstorms, you would never see the beauty of their carvings."I admit that October night three years ago was one of those times when the beauty was hard to find. But during the course of my life, I had stood at similiar crossroads, searching the horizon for something nearly impossible to see. At those moments you can either hold on to negativity and look for blame, or you can choose to heal and keep on loving. Since I believe our only purpose for existing is to grow, I had no problem making a choice.So a few days after the fire, I drove in to town, bought a change of clothes and got set for whatever was going to happen next.In a way, that is the story of my life.Copyright © 1997 by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Read more

Features & Highlights

  • On Life and Living
  • Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, M.D., is the woman who has transformed the way the world thinks about death and dying. Beginning with the groundbreaking publication of the classic psychological study
  • On Death and Dying
  • and continuing through her many books and her years working with terminally ill children, AIDS patients, and the elderly, Kübler-Ross has brought comfort and understanding to millions coping with their own deaths or the deaths of loved ones. Now, at age seventy-one facing her own death, this world-renowned healer tells the story of her extraordinary life. Having taught the world how to die well, she now offers a lesson on how to live well. Her story is an adventure of the heart -- powerful, controversial, inspirational -- a fitting legacy of a powerful life.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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what falls through the sieve will be very useful.

I believe that anything Dr. Kubler-Ross has written is worthy of our attention, and this autobiographical book is no exception. I just finished it today... found it very thought-provoking overall. However, this particular one needs to be read more CRITICALLY than her others, and I don't mean "skeptically" in a negative sense so much as simply "requiring careful judgment"... especially the last third of the book. In this latter section, the author really gets specific about her experiences with "channeling the other side" and outlines her concept of her own "cosmic consciousness." I tried to be as enlightened and open as possible, and yet found that I could just not buy into everything she had experienced and was teaching others to experience. I am referring mainly to her ongoing relationships with disembodied spirits, her ability to conjure them up at will, and (maybe most remarkably) their apparent ability to physically manifest themselves (as in, writing things down on a piece of paper in response to her questions). She refers to these spirit-friends as her "spooks" and by her own admission at one point she even attributes the collapse of her otherwise successful marriage to her profound belief in these entities. Many people felt she had lost her marbles. She admits that a few of the experiences were proved to be the hoax of her Californian spiritual instructor, whom she calls "B". Also, throughout the last half of the book is an underlying allusion to her belief in re-incarnation.
For the first half of the book I could think of so many people I would have recommended it to, but then it suddenly arrived at a place where I think a reader has to be very selective, or adept at SIFTING through to their own concept of truth. Very critical. Be aware of that if you intend to give this book as a gift to someone.
I agree thoroughly with the core principles of what can rightfully be called Kubler-Ross's thanatology. I agree with her that death does not exist in the traditional sense, and that life in a physical body represents a very short span of one's total existence. That at the moment of death human beings maintain an awareness and can still make observations, have thoughts, be free of pain, and that all of this has nothing to do with psychopathology. That those who pass from life into death are simply passing into "a different wavelength than the rest of us." I agree that our body "imprisons our soul the way a cocoon encloses the future butterfly, and when the time is right we can let go of it." She says that the butterfly is then free to return "home to God... which is a place where we are never alone, where we continue to grow and to sing and to dance, where we are with those we loved, and where we are surrounded with more love than we can ever imagine." I wish that this last sentiment was more emphasized in the book, rather than appearing in the next to last page. Because it seems inconsistent to me that if the spirits return home to God (which I firmly believe), then what are we to make of the ones that were roaming around in the elevators, appearing in the author's bed, and in the flower-garden etc.? Maybe we should just leave those sort of spirits alone instead of trying to make them our pals? Hey, our lives ARE definitely going someplace! Life is indeed a sort of "wheel". But God, and God alone, is at the wheel.
44 people found this helpful
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Good Start - Wacky Finish

I just finished this book, and am sorry to say I was just shaking my head by the end of it. The beginning was fine and interesting, following her journey from childhood to medical school. Something went wrong in her life when she was in her 40's, and that's when the story got wacky. It was probably the California life-style of the 1970's and all the garbage about channeling the other side, etc. I wanted so badly to plead with her to go back to her family and raise her children instead of running around the country searching for who knows what. It really was quite flaky as she told of spirits having long conversations with her. This poor woman was seeing and hearing things that were not there. She seemed so lost spiritually, and it sounded as though she was estranged from her family. I do not discount her work with the stages of dying, this was an important contribution. But if love was the most important thing of all, that goal seemed elusive to her. Very sad.
30 people found this helpful
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Great Writer

The first part of the book was most enjoyable. Then she seems to change, thinking only of her needs. It was hard to read that she left her children at a crucial time in their lives. While what she did with the dying was commendable, I didn't like the way she treated her family, her peers, and others. She had a very big ego and was a big critic of others. She had lots of good attributes, including working hard, helping others, strong determination, etc. but there also seemed to be a big void in her life. I felt a little sorry for her and her family.
15 people found this helpful
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We all owe this woman a huge amount of gratitude

Kubler-Ross had a massive impact on our society and the way we approach death. Her collection of 20,000 interviews with people who died and came back to life showed common threads in almost every way, a spiritual goldmine of positive and loving experiences. This autobiography details how she came to be the person who let us know for sure that "heaven" isn't some hokey religious shell-game available only to those who tithe, but rather a guaranteed return for all of us to a more loving place.

The first half of this book is tear-inducingly sad and beautiful, and it's hard to not love the young Kubler-Ross as she lets her heart lead her through very tough times. There are some exceptionally moving passages that make this book a real must for those who want to feel better about letting go of life and living it more fully here and now.

Unfortunately, the latter part of this book and her life found her enamored of charlatans and spiritual quackery, but in no way does that lessen her accomplishments. Not a one of us is perfect, and very few of us change the way the world sees life. Elizabeth was one such soul, so it's easy to accept her foibles.

I read this book while preparing for an interview with Kubler-Ross, which sadly turned out to be the last she gave before her passing. She was as gracious and wise and funny as this book indicates, and was very much ready to die. She spoke lovingly of her life and happily of letting it go to move on homeward, and she clearly embodied the many positive attributes of this truly moving autobiography.

Highly recommended for those who like to both feel and think.
Knowing that death will be joyous sure takes the load off.
14 people found this helpful
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Disappointing

I don't want to in any way discount the body of work this woman created, yet I have to say I was disappointed in this book. By the end, I kept thinking that the most important lesson Dr. Kubler-Ross needed to learn before she died was humility. She evidently considered herself a thoroughly evolved human being, yet wrote with bitterness about the world she would be leaving behind. Also there were times that she lapsed into sentimentality when speaking about her childhood in Switzerland.

I really wanted to love this book. But I think she revealed more than she realized and robbed readers of an example of her own "good death."
12 people found this helpful
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Moving story of what makes life so worthwhile!

Heard THE WHEEL OF LIFE by Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, the author

of the classic ON DEATH AND DYING . . . here, facing her own death

at age 71, she tells the moving story of her life and what makes life so

worthwhile.

It is love!

As she notes, "I have never met a person whose greatest need was

not love."

She then concludes with a powerful final statement, saying, "It is very

important that you do only what you what you love to do. You may be

poor, you may go hungry, you may live in a shabby place, but you will

totally live. And at the end of your shabby days, you will bless your life

because you have done what you came here to do."

It seems that doing so will make dying easier. Or so it can be

hoped!

Ellen Burstyn's narration added to my enjoyment of the book . . . in

addition, I liked that there was an introduction by the author.
8 people found this helpful
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Amazing book by an amazing woman

This is an amazing book. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross's life story is inspiring, but her message is more so: When you reach the end of your life you'll be faced with the question "What good have I done? What service have I rendered?" If you wait until then to answer it, she says, it will be too late. Truly words to live by. Dance on, Elisabeth!
6 people found this helpful
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One Of The Most Profound & Inspiring Memoirs Of Our Time!

I've read hundreds of books from a vast resource of authors and medical professionals in my lifetime. I've been reduced to snorts of disbelief by some...made to think by others...and moved to tears by a select few. If asked to highlight just ONE who has made a tremendous impact on the way I view the wheel of life & death, it would be Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. We all have a purpose in life, but I believe that some, such as Kubler-Ross are chosen to lead the lost, despairing and confused to the light. Her compassion...her mercy...her independence & courage...and her strong backbone & unwillingness to conform are what make her so worthy of respect & commendation. I think what I find most unsettling in the subject of LAD is that it is so easy for people to write it off as pure fantasy, because hey, science SAYS so and that's that. I'm sorry, but you'll never convince me that science is anything other than a product of it's own reality. Until you've reached the border of your own earthly existence, one cannot possibly be expected to fully KNOW the truth. There are people who ask me how I can spend so much of my life concerned about death. And the answer is because the impending knowledge of death teaches us how to LIVE and how to LOVE. And angels such as EKR inspire humanity through the grace of God. There will come a day when we will all need the comfort and strength that this lovely lady has given through her immortalized words. But I recommend that you prepare yourself BEFORE that day comes with this book that stands in a class by itself. There have been heroes & heroines all throughout recorded history, and EKR has earned her place for the beauty she brought to the world during her time with us, and all she did to help open humanity's faith. I can't predict how much others will get from this remarkable memoir, but I, personally FELT the spirt of Ross within this book from start to finish. I'd be honored to deliver a post humous standing ovation. Bravo Elisabeth!
5 people found this helpful
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Memoirs

I was a little disapointed with this book. Her book on dead and dying gave such hope for those who had lost someone close to her especially given her credentials. This was an autobiography and was dry to read.
4 people found this helpful
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Love to Elisabeth from Linda

Dear Elisabeth, how can I possibly show the gratitude that I feel in my heart for you. Your books were so helpful to me as I searched for information to help me understand this natural part of our life, our transition that we alone must take on our own terms if left alone to accomplish this. I sincerely appreciate your sharing your personal life story that guides us through how you would possibly know everything you are able to share with us now. Your lifes work is so important and I hope that many people will have the interest to understand what you share. My son Jason's transition was so beautiful, as things happened around us, that our family feels that we are supposed to share this experience of Jason's transition to Heaven to give others hope and that is our intention. Everything has happened to make this wish come true! I know that you have been especially blessed by the time you spent with dying children because they all have a message to share with us if we only listen. Respecting the wishes of a person as they go through the experience of death is very important and if they express wishes please "go with the flow" even if it disturbs you, because after all, is it not their desires that are of utmost importance at this time? Dying with dignity should be the goal surrounded by love and compassion. Please listen and let the process take you to a place of Grace that God provides us for our faith. Our faith may be different from yours but that is ok. We experienced detachment by surrendering our hearts to the process of, which God is in charge, for Jason's return journey back home to God, and received Gods Grace for our faith. Lovingly we went through the experience of Jasons transition to Heaven and our family experienced "the peace that passes understanding" with a light so bright that we knew we were held in Gods heart the whole time. With Jesus always in my heart I share His message of unconditional love to all. Jason and I knew that what you believe is true Elisabeth...that when our body can no longer sustain life that our body releases our soul at that time...our Butterfly and that is exactly what happened... as Jason's watch beeps a greeting to share his approval of what I've just shared. Love from Jason in Heaven and Linda on earth
4 people found this helpful