When Bridgeport resident Lynda Shannon Bluestein learned her death was imminent due to terminal cancer, she began a push to end her own life on her own terms.
Bluestein, 76, sued the state of Vermont, pushing for expanded access to a law there allowing people with a terminal illness to take lethal medication to end their own lives.
She prevailed. Last Thursday, Bluestein became one of the first non-residents to use that law, dying in Concord, surrounded by family.
Speaking on 海角换妻 Radio鈥檚 鈥淎udacious鈥 in 2022 Bluestein said dying on her own terms was a matter of personal choice.
鈥淚 want access to everyone for those who choose to have this as an option, having the full range of care that physicians can offer, and that includes extending my life, operating on me, giving me drugs. It also includes allowing me to say, when I've had enough, I can go to sleep and not wake up,鈥 Bluestein said. 鈥淚t's a moral question of doing the right thing by those who love me and by loving myself.鈥
CT Public鈥檚 Chion Wolf recorded this remembrance on Jan. 9, with her husband, Dr. Paul Bluestein. Below are excerpts from the interview.
On Lynda鈥檚 sense of humor
Dr. Bluestein remembered his wife鈥檚 love of playing practical jokes on him. Once, his car doors kept unlocking on their own right after he locked them with his key fob.
鈥淚 said, 鈥楲ynda, there's something wrong with the car! I think I have to take it in. There must be something wrong with the electrical system,鈥欌 he said.
鈥淎nd she said, 鈥榃hat do you think it is?鈥欌
She had her own key fob hidden behind her back the whole time.
鈥淟ynda had made a promise to me 40 years ago that she would make me laugh every day, regardless of how bad things got. At least once a day,鈥 Dr. Bluestein said. 鈥淪he kept that promise, literally, up until and including the day that she passed.鈥
How Paul would like Lynda to be remembered
If he were to inscribe one sentence on a headstone for his wife, Dr. Bluestein said he would want it to say 鈥渟he lived a life that mattered.鈥
He also shared other notes of remembrance from one of Lynda鈥檚 longtime friends.
鈥淪he said that she was going to miss Lynda's commitment, her friendship, her wit and her 鈥榬ighteous Irish outrage.鈥 I'd never heard that phrase before, but I thought that that was exactly right. Righteous Irish outrage.鈥
While it鈥檚 easy for some to complain when things are wrong, he said Lynda was different.
鈥淟ynda saw things that were wrong and said 鈥業 have to do something about this.鈥欌
Hear an extended conversation with Dr. Bluestein and Lynda's son, Jacob, on 鈥淎udacious鈥 Saturday, Jan. 20, at 10 a.m. or on-demand.
Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly reported the town where Bluestein died. It was Concord, Vermont, not Brattleboro. The story has been updated.