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Brittany Maynard, advocate for 'death with dignity,' dies
By Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN
updated 9:12 AM EST, Mon November 3, 2014
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Brittany Maynard died Saturday, "in the arms of her loved ones,"
group says
"Love and peace to you all," she says in final message
Her story spread rapidly on social media
The 29-year-old said she had terminal brain cancer
(CNN) -- Brittany Maynard, the 29-year-old who said she had terminal brain
cancer, took medication to end her life under Oregon's "Death with Dignity
Act," advocacy group Compassion & Choices said Sunday.
"Brittany chose to make a well thought out and informed choice to Die With
Dignity in the face of such a terrible, painful, and incurable illness," a
post on her website said. "She moved to Oregon to pass away in a little
yellow house she picked out in the beautiful city of Portland."
In a statement, Compassion & Choices, an end-of-life choice advocacy group
that has been working closely with Maynard, said she "died as she intended -
- peacefully in her bedroom, in the arms of her loved ones."
Brittany Maynard's journey Brittany Maynard's journey
Maynard passed away Saturday, said the group, which released an official
obituary.
The epitaph contained a final message from Maynard, who expressed a note of
deep thanks to all of her supporters, whom she "sought out like water"
during her life and illness.
"It is people who pause to appreciate life and give thanks who are happiest.
If we change our thoughts, we change our world! Love and peace to you all,"
she said.
Maynard graduated from University of California, Berkeley, and earned a
Masters in Education from University of California, Irvine, according to the
obituary. She was a world traveler who volunteered at a local animal rescue
organization before her diagnosis and lived 29 years of "generosity,
compassion, education, travel, and humor," it said.
Maynard is survived by her husband and his family, her mother and stepfather.
"While she had longed for children of her own, she left this world with zero
regrets on time spent, places been, or people she loved in her 29 years,"
the obituary said.
Maynard ticks off last item on bucket list
Maynard's story spread rapidly on social media as a video explaining her
choice garnered more than 9 million views on YouTube.
She became a prominent spokeswoman for the "death with dignity" movement,
which advocates that terminally ill patients be allowed to receive
medication that will let them die on their own terms. She also became a
lightning rod for criticism from people who oppose that approach.
"I quickly decided that death with dignity was the best option for me and my
family," Maynard wrote in an opinion column for CNN explaining her choice.
"We had to uproot from California to Oregon, because Oregon is one of only
five states where death with dignity is authorized."
Maynard: I hope my family is proud of me
Explaining 'Death with Dignity' law
Brittany Maynard: I don't want to die
In a video released last week, Maynard said she hadn't yet decided when she
would end her life.
"I still feel good enough, and I still have enough joy, and I still laugh
and smile with my family and friends enough that it doesn't seem like the
right time right now. But it will come, because I feel myself getting sicker
. It's happening each week," Maynard said in the video, which was produced
by Compassion & Choices and released to CNN last Wednesday.
My mother deserved to 'die with dignity'
Maynard said she had stage IV glioblastoma multiforme, an aggressive form of
terminal brain cancer.
When she first started speaking out about her decision, Maynard said that in
early November she planned to take the medication she'd been prescribed. In
her latest video, she said she was waiting to see how her symptoms progress
before deciding on a date.
But taking too long to make that choice was one of her greatest fears,
Maynard said.
"The worst thing that could happen to me is that I wait too long because I'm
trying to seize each day," she says, "but I somehow have my autonomy taken
away from me by my disease, because of the nature of my cancer."
Why her story resonates
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