Author Joan Paddock Maxwell is a speaker and teacher about death and dying from a spiritual and psychological perspective, drawing from 12 years' experience as a hospital chaplain, 6 of them as interfaith palliative care chaplain at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, DC, where she specialized in patients who were dying.
"It was my joy to serve people from every walk of life and many different countries; people of many different faiths, including no faith at all. As life draws to a close, matters of the spirit become crucially important to patients and their families and friends." Visit joanpmaxwell.com for more information.
Author of the book "Soul Support - Spiritual Encounters at Life's End: Memoir of a Hospital Chaplain."
A young dancer's last hope--a bone marrow transplant--has failed. A homeless man, in the final stages of AIDS, refuses to speak. A newly retired woman has just received a terminal diagnosis and is wailing in despair. What can we learn about death, dying, and the human spirit as we journey with a hospital chaplain into sickrooms like these? Soul Support tells true stories of people coming to terms--or not--with their final days. It offers intimate, behind-the-scenes accounts of the many ways patients, their families and friends, and hospital staff all deal with death and dying. It speaks to readers reflecting on their own mortality or the life-threatening illness of a loved one, and tells of the sometimes-astonishing events that can occur when people are in their last hours of life. The book tells not only their stories, but also the chaplain's. It relates how she listened and learned and stumbled and grew. Soul Support speaks to believers and nonbelievers alike, providing information, inspiration, and hope.