Abstract
Wonderings about hospice patients' experience of dying evolved into the question, "What is it like to have a life-threatening illness?" That question guided this interpretive phenomenological inquiry. Phenomenology is a philosophy that seeks to rediscover the rich meaning lying hidden beneath the surface of everyday. Phenomenology's quest is to coax that which has been concealed out into the light. It is a call to re-dis-cover what Martin Heidegger (1959/1966) might call the mystery of Being. What is it that anesthetizes us to the wonder of our everydays? What is it about the ordinary that blinds us to its depth? We numbly plod or madly race along the surface of our lives, forgetting that great mysteries surround us, above, below and within. The discovery of a life-threatening illness is an unwelcome shock. It abruptly tears away the familiar and plunges a person into the unknown. Nothing is as it was before. And yet, almost everything is as it was before.
Sigma Membership
Lambda
Type
Dissertation
Format Type
Text-based Document
Study Design/Type
Phenomenology
Research Approach
Qualitative Research
Keywords:
Life-endangering Illnesses, Emotional Wellness, Phenomenological Research
Advisor
Maggie T. Neal
Degree
PhD
Degree Grantor
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Degree Year
1998
Recommended Citation
Roop, Janna C., "Between this world and the next: The lived experience of having a life-threatening illness" (2020). Dissertations. 717.
https://www.sigmarepository.org/dissertations/717
Rights Holder
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All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.
Review Type
None: Degree-based Submission
Acquisition
Proxy-submission
Date of Issue
2020-01-08
Full Text of Presentation
wf_yes
Description
This dissertation has also been disseminated through the ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. Dissertation/thesis number: 9916533; ProQuest document ID: 304466116. The author still retains copyright.