Odd to find this breed of wistful storytelling in the obituaries, but there it was.
Rob Lutz; ex-paratrooper planned final 'mission'By Carol Smith, Seattle Post-Intelligencer | June 4, 2007
SEATTLE -- Retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Rob Lutz, a former Air Commando pilot, had less than 72 hours to live. A failing heart and kidneys left Mr. Lutz, 55, too sick to withstand an operation for a heart pump, let alone a heart transplant.
After nine weeks in intensive care at the University of Washington Medical Center, he was told by doctors that there was nothing left to do.
No, Mr. Lutz said. There was something.
A free-fall paratrooper whose steady nerves and fierce intelligence guided him through years of clandestine missions with Special Forces in the military, Mr. Lutz had one last special operation in mind. That it was nearly impossible didn't faze him. And so he set about executing a plan from his hospital bed.
At 10 a.m. on May 17, he told his doctors that they could take out the balloon pump that eased oxygen into his weakened heart but kept him flat on his back. Then he told them to remove the dialysis catheter in his groin that was unable to clear the nearly 50 pounds of fluid weighing on his heart. Next he told them to discontinue all but one medication, a move that he understood would hasten the inevitable.
Then he asked for a plane. There was nothing in life, except his wife, that Mr. Lutz loved more than flying.
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Mr. Lutz himself got on the phone to a pilot friend. Mau overheard him say something like: "I can't go Saturday. I'm dying today or tomorrow. I have to go today." Someone in the room chided him for being so demanding, which made everyone laugh. He had a great sense of humor, Mau said. And he made things happen.
Ed Hrivnak was the pilot who got the call. A friend from their days in search and rescue, he scurried to find a helicopter. Glacier Aviation in Olympia helped, producing a fueled-up R-22 two-seater that could be at Boeing Field in a matter of minutes.
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And so just after 7 p.m., as the sun was going down, Rob Lutz's heart lifted into the sky one last time.
"The air was calm, and there were light puffy clouds in the sky," Hrivnak said. "The sky was lit, and the mountains were lit. He just kept looking out the window."
Hrivnak and Lutz flew into the foothills of the Cascades with Mount Rainier dead ahead. They flew low through the valley of the Green River. They talked about life and letting go.
When Mr. Lutz landed, he just had a huge grin on his face.
He died a few days later.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/obituaries/articles/2007/06/04/rob_lutz_ex_paratrooper_planned_final_mission/?page=2