I have a friend in the same situation. Getting on the list isn’t as easy as sone seem to suggest. My buddy has watched his diet for 6 years. Never drank expressively and hasn’t had alcohol in over 10 years. He’s done everything he was supposed to do and has done it for years. He just got out on the list last month.
Over the last two years he’s been on it and off it for various reasons due to not being strong enough to accept a transplant. That wasn’t his doing. But, he’s been yellow for a year and has spent 3/4 of the last year in the hospital.
In January. The doctors told him there was nothing else they could do. And suggested sending him home on hospice. His daughter and son wouldn’t take that answer and got him into Duke.
They ambulanced him there, he stayed for two days. He left on the list and is currently awaiting a call to get it as soon as a source is found. His only requirements is he had to stay close as it’s a time sensitive study.
My point is, unless you know for sure he’s the hold up, I wouldn’t say he’s at fault. And, unless he simply refuses to look at all his options, I’m willing to say it’s likely not his doing.
I could be wrong. But, 11 years ago the doctors at Wake Forest gave me a 20% chance to live. I decided to take the treatments. I lived. But, if they told me tomorrow I’d have to do it again, I truly don’t know if I would.
Sometimes, death isn’t the worst imaginable thing. And, until it’s really knocked on your door, it’s hard to understand that.