Chandra Maya
Chandra Maya Magar is old. She is 58. She is poor. She
suffers from end stage renal disease which is just another way of saying both
her kidneys are virtually non-functional. Her kidneys cannot remove the toxin
that build up in her body. Her kidneys cannot produce urine. The excess water
that builds up in her body has no escape. It starts collecting in her lungs
causing her shortness of breath. She requires dialysis at least three times a
week. The government provides dialysis two times a week for free. So that’s all
she gets. That’s all she can afford. Every third day she is left gasping for
life. At least once every week she is pushed to the brink of death and up to
now somehow someway her doctors have been able to pull her back. Someday,
within a few months or less, they won’t be able to. This is not a grim view of
the future or a wannabe writer trying to dramatize for added effect, it is the
truth. Unfortunate, yes but inevitable. She will die. She needs a transplant.
She cannot even dare to imagine that she can afford that. Her life will amount
to nothing. She will not be remembered by friends or family. Her husband is a
drunk. Her son is tired of all the hassles that come with a dying mother. All
they wish is she be released from her suffering and they from theirs. What
happened in the first part of her life is lost. The second part of her life has
been nothing but a struggle for survival. She has to fight for every breath.
She looks upon the next day not with hope but with fear. She might have to be
rushed to the emergency room. She might need a haemodialysis session, one she
cannot afford. She might die. A life that will amount to nothing. Born in
poverty, abandoned by a family, destroyed by a disease. She is fighting a lost
cause. A painful death awaits. The only question that remains is what will it
be that kills her? The failing kidneys, an abandoned life or poverty?