English Listening Practice Fascinating End-of-Life Experiences
English listening practice on a topic that will matter to all of us at some point in our lives. Even though we are all going to die at some point we rarely think about this or discuss it, very few scientists investigate it and only a few rare and special people work with people who are dying. So today we take a look at the end of our lives while we improve your English comprehension and listening skills, a topic that should keep everyone listening, press play and enjoy!
š§ Why listen to this lesson?
- Prepare to see your final moments in a different way.
- Engage in immersive English Listening Practice.
- Enhance your English Speaking with practical Conversation Tips.
- Improve your understanding of Idioms and Pronunciation.
Want to improve your English comprehension? Head to Adept English and view our video to find out how our method can boost your listening skills.
āļø Lesson transcript: https://adeptenglish.com/lessons/english-listening-practice-life-death-experiences/
We all die. The goal isn’t to live forever, the goal is to create something that will.
ā Chuck Palahniuk
Ever wondered what life’s final moments reveal about our true priorities? In our latest English lesson, we delve into touching stories from palliative care nurses.
Discover the comforting visions that ease the end-of-life journey and improve your English while exploring this profound topic. Ready to learn more?
Death is not the greatest loss in life. The greatest loss is what dies inside us while we live.
ā Norman Cousins
Listen now and start working on your English skills now! š Visit Adept English for more Courses and Study Tips. Don’t forget to follow and subscribe to our FREE English language podcast, wherever you listen or watch your podcasts.
More About This Lesson
Improve your English skills while exploring the comforting visions and experiences shared by palliative care nurses and patients in their final moments.
To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die.
ā Thomas Campbell
What we learn from the dying: enhance your English listening:
- Expand Vocabulary: Learn words like ‘palliative’ and ‘delirium’.
- Real-Life Context: Understand English through real-world topics.
- Listening Practice: Improve listening skills with engaging content.
- Pronunciation Tips: Hear correct pronunciation of complex terms.
- Cultural Insight: Gain knowledge about customs and experiences in different cultures.
- Discussion Engagement: Use new words in comments and discussions.
- Scientific Insights: Learn about studies and findings from Dr. Chris Kerr.
- Emotional Topics: Engage with sensitive and meaningful content.
- Interactive Learning: Apply new vocabulary in your own sentences.
- Continuous Improvement: Access additional courses and materials.
Ready to discover the secrets of life’s most profound moments? In this captivating lesson, we dive into the unique experiences of palliative care nurses and the life-changing insights theyāve gained.
Death is nothing else but going home to God, the bond of love will be unbroken for all eternity.
ā Mother Teresa
You’ll learn new vocabulary effortlessly while exploring this deep, moving topic. Listen now and improve your English as we unravel the mysteries of end-of-life care. Don’t miss outāimmerse yourself in this thought-provoking lesson and share your thoughts using your new words!
So start listening now and improve your English as we explore the mysteries of end-of-life care. Don’t miss outāimmerse yourself in this thought-provoking English lesson and share your thoughts using your new words! Subscribe to our podcast for more lessons and insights.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- What will you learn from this English lesson about palliative care experiences?
You’ll improve your British English skills while exploring fascinating end-of-life phenomena. You’ll learn vocabulary related to palliative care, practice listening comprehension with real-life stories, and enhance your speaking ability by discussing profound human experiences. - How does this lesson help you improve your English fluency?
This lesson immerses you in authentic, context-rich language. You’ll hear natural British English speech patterns, learn idiomatic expressions, and practice discussing complex topics. This combination of engaging content and language practice accelerates your journey to fluency. - Is this English lesson suitable for all proficiency levels?
While the content is more advanced, learners at various levels can benefit. Beginners will expand their vocabulary and listening skills. Intermediate learners will enhance their comprehension and speaking abilities. Advanced learners will refine their fluency and cultural understanding. - How can you apply the language skills from this lesson in real-life situations?
The vocabulary and expressions you learn are applicable in healthcare settings, discussions about life and death, and conversations about human experiences. You’ll be better equipped to express empathy, discuss sensitive topics, and understand nuanced conversations in English. - What makes this English lesson unique compared to traditional language learning materials?
This lesson combines language learning with profound human experiences, making the content more memorable. You’re not just learning English; you’re gaining insights into life, death, and cultural perspectives. This approach, inspired by polyglot techniques, helps you absorb language more naturally and deeply.
Enhance your English fluency with our unique tutorial on end-of-life experiences. This advanced listening and speaking lesson explores comforting visions shared by palliative care nurses and patients. Ideal for intermediate to advanced learners, it combines vocabulary, pronunciation, and conversation practice. Improve your language skills while delving into profound human experiences. Perfect for exam prep or daily English practice. Learn, review, and grow your English proficiency with this thought-provoking lifestyle and news-focused lesson.
Most Unusual Words:
- Palliative: End of life care.
- Phenomena: Unusual or remarkable events.
- Delirium: A state when someone’s brain is not working properly, often causing confusion.
- Hallucination: Seeing or hearing things that are not real.
- Reunion: Meeting again after being apart.
- Insight: Deep understanding of a person or situation.
- Fulfilment: Feeling satisfied and happy because of achieving something.
- Vigil: A period of keeping awake to watch or pray, often used to describe family staying by a dying person’s bedside.
- Privacy: Being alone, away from other people.
- Lucidly: Clearly and easily understood, with full awareness.
Most Frequently Used Words:
Word | Count |
---|---|
People | 18 |
About | 17 |
These | 15 |
Nurses | 13 |
Dying | 13 |
Person | 11 |
Their | 9 |
Other | 8 |
Experiences | 8 |
Family | 7 |
Listen To The Audio Lesson Now
Transcript: English Listening Practice-Your FINAL Moments In Life
Can āend of life experienceā show us valuable lessons about our lives?
Hi there and welcome to this podcast. Today letās talk about a more challenging subject – in terms of content, not vocabulary. I saw an article published this week on the ABC news network Australia. Its title? āPalliative care nurses see us in our final hours – these are the life lessons that theyāve learnedā. Vocabulary here? What does āpalliativeā mean? Thatās PALLIATIVE – it means āend of lifeā. So āpalliative careā means āthe care that people receive towards the end of their lifeā. Really important that itās sensitive in other words. And when we say ālife lessonsā, what we mean are āvaluable life lessonsā. What are peopleās priorities? For example, there are not many people who at the end of their life, wish theyād spent more time in the office or at work! Thatās a piece of insight perhaps that most of us need to bear in mind in the middle of our lives?! Itās worth thinking about. And these nurses had some fascinating things to share.
The nurses that were interviewed also talked about āthings happen that are difficult to explainā towards the end of someoneās life. And some of the strange experiences, strange phenomena associated with āend of life careā, Iāve heard about in my psychotherapy work too, when a client speaks about the death of a family member. I also came across a scientific study into this, by Dr Chris Kerr of Buffalo, New York. Heās a palliative care doctor. So letās talk today about this fascinating, but difficult subject and about experiences which probably happen all over the world. While your brain is engaged with this fascinating topic, youāll also be improving your understanding of spoken English – what could be better than that?! So listen to this podcast, discover new words while immersing yourself in a compelling topic. And donāt forget to leave us a comment on this subject, in English, using the new words that youāve learned, of course!
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Fascinating insights – whatās important and what happens psychologically at āend of lifeā?
So letās talk first about what the Australian palliative care nurses described. And how about 80% of dying patients, interviewed in Dr Chris Kerr’s study reported seeing visions of dead relatives, dead family members. And these experiences – they were not distressing – instead they brought immense comfort, a sense of reunion. And they made the process of āpassing awayā – dying, in other words – much less frightening. What are we to make of all this?
So the palliative care nurses first of all. All three nurses in the article had been in nursing for a long time. I think it takes a very special type of person to be a palliative care nurse. Iām not sure I could do that. But these three nurses obviously find the work really fulfilling – that means āsatisfying and meaningfulā. One of these nurses has in fact been working in palliative care for 26 years – so I guess she will have seen a few things.
Can you imagine having conversations with loved ones who passed away long ago?
One of the phenomena or experiences that all the nurses agreed on and which Iāve heard about in psychotherapy too. Quite often when a person is dying, they seem to have visions, VISIONS. They āseeā in other words, āvisionsā of relatives, family members who perhaps died long ago. They have conversations with them. Often itās as though that person is in the room. It gets dismissed medically as ādeliriumā, thatās DELIRIUM – meaning that the personās brain āis not working properlyā. Or weāre told āitās a hallucinationā – meaning again that itās not real and itās ādown to certain brain processesā – people offer theories for, anyway. But itās a very particular type of vision. Normally ādeliriumā – thatās something you might experience when youāve got a very high temperature – ādeliriumā is random. But these visions seem very similar to one another and are experienced by many people. Itās almost as though people who died long ago are returning to collect the person who is about to die. The nurses reported that people of 90 years old will suddenly believe that theyāre having a conversation with their mothers or sisters or brothers, who died long ago. To the family in the room with the dying person, these apparent visions can be worrying, disconcerting perhaps. But the nurses say it is important to āgo with itā, donāt dismiss it or to argue against what the person says they see. Most dying people find these experiences really comforting – itās helpful in other words. And it can make the dying person less anxious. And who is to say? Who is to judge these experiences? Obviously medical science is likely to dismiss anything spiritual or anything that cannot be scientifically explained or measured. Itās similar to the ānear death experienceā reports, that Iāve spoken about before, where people see their āloved onesā, the people they love that have already died. And they say āGo back, itās not your time yet!ā Who is to say what the explanation is? And who has a position where they can dismiss this? To say itās delirium feels dismissive. Dismissive of an experience that sounds important and which seems to happen to a lot of people.
Why do some people ‘hold on’ before passing away? What are they waiting for?
Something else that the nurses talked about, which Iāve also heard too. When people are dying, sometimes it takes much longer than expected. Itās as though the person is āholding onā for some reason. In the article, one of the nurses talked about a young man who was dying from cancer – but who just seemed to be holding on. They asked āHas he seen everybody that he needs to?ā And the reply was āYes – all the important people in his life – heās seen themā. āHas he got any pets?ā was the question. And it was then clear that there were two dogs that were really important to him. The nurse then had the insight, the understanding to say āBring the dogs inā. When the dogs were brought, the man whoād had been partially conscious, not aware, seemed to put his hand onto the dogsā heads. He died within half an hour!
And Iāve heard about this idea in therapy too. Sometimes people dying will wait for an anniversary, for Christmas or until a relative who needs to travel from far away has arrived. Or sometimes thereās a conversation that needs to be had. Once this has happened, itās then as though the person dying can be at peace, PEACE and allowed to go, because something has been resolved. That seems a very common experience.
Have you ever heard about people dying when left alone by their family?
Another phenomenon, another experience I come across – this one upsets people when probably it shouldnāt. When there is what we call in English āa vigilā, thatās VIGIL and that means where the family sit round the bed. Where there is a vigil for the dying person, sooner or later normal human needs come. People get hungry. They need to sleep. So the relatives, the family members leave the room. And of course, thatās when the person dies. Iāve known this cause huge sadness – people who cannot forgive themselves for not being there. But perhaps they should! It seems sometimes as though the person dying actually wants privacy to do it! Thatās PRIVACY – it means ābeing on your ownā. They need to be on their own to do the necessary, to whatās needed! Iāve heard that one so often. And instead of being upset, perhaps the relatives should be pleased – that the person had some choice – and thatās what they chose and thatās OK!
English Listening Practice | Friends & Money
Is it disrespectful for medical science to dismiss what may be spiritual experiences as hallucinations?
Dr Chris Kerr is the physician in the US, who specialises in hospice care. āPhysicianā, PHYSICIAN is just the word the Americans use for āa doctorā. And āhospice careā? Well, a āhospiceā, HOSPICE is a hospital for the dying, set up specially to take care of their needs. So Dr Chris Kerr, instead of being like most doctors, concerned only with the patientās physical condition and trying to make them well again, he made it his work to be concerned with what happens for patients emotionally, psychologically when theyāre dying. And his feeling is that to call these experiences that dying people have, of seeing their relatives as ādeliriumā or ādelusionā is incorrect, disrespectful even. The experiences are meaningful, are often very similar to one another. They give great comfort. So Dr Chris Kerr has interviewed and videoed lots of dying people, who talk about these visions, these experiences, very lucidly – thatās LUCIDLY, which means āwith much awarenessā, āwithout confusionā. Iāve included a link to the TED talk of Dr Chris Kerr in the transcript. Heās collected 450 interviews with dying patients to collect their experiences. And 80% of the people interviewed described having a dream or a vision, where they saw dead family members and they interacted with them – they spoke to them and found this very positive. In other words very comforting. And a sense of reunion, being reunited, the feeling of ānot being aloneā was comforting and important to them.
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Do you believe visions at the end of life are more than just delirium?
I think Dr Chris Kerr is ahead of much of western medicine in being able to recognise the importance of these experiences. Sometimes it helps dying people resolve what have been the big tragedies, the things that have given them most pain in their lives. Iām sure that actually itās once again western medicine that is somewhat behind thinking in other cultures around the world. Iām sure the experiences Iāve described happen in other parts of the world too. And I imagine that these experiences are treated with rather more respect and understanding. Possibly there are customs and traditions around them. I tried to research this – and found material on different customs around death and loss around the world. But very little on the experience of people who are dying.
Let us know your experiences
So if youāve experienced what Iām talking about today, or a relative of yours has, please get in touch and let us know – Iād be really interested. And especially if your culture gives meaning to these experiences. Get in touch. Let us know. And if youāve got other things to say about the podcast, then also get in touch. We also value your suggestions for topics for us to cover.
Goodbye
Enough for now. Have a lovely day, Speak to you again soon. Goodbye.
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