Diane’s farewell message
After 52 years at WAMU, Diane Rehm says goodbye.
Diana Williams tells Diane she hopes sharing her experience helps people to talk about death more openly in America.
Diana Williams lived a rich life by any measure. She was a wife, a mother, a traveler, and the founder of a job training organization at San Quentin prison in California.
But for three decades, Williams was plagued by mysterious symptoms. These included exhaustion, night sweats, brain fog, and throbbing headaches and chills that left her bedridden for days.
Specialists diagnosed her with a series of maladies such as multiple sclerosis, Lyme disease, and toxic mold exposure. They prescribed grueling treatments that took up time, money, and ultimately proved unsuccessful.
Williams eventually decided enough was enough. In January of this year, she traveled to Dignitas, a “death with dignity” group in Switzerland, and ended her life.
In December 2023, just weeks before her “death date,” Williams joined Diane for a conversation about her agonizing choice and why she felt it was so important to tell her story of “a life well lived, a death well planned.”
You can read more about Diana Williams’s story in her posthumously published memoir, “Traveling Solo.”
After 52 years at WAMU, Diane Rehm says goodbye.
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