End-of-life may refer to:
In medicine, nursing and the allied health professions, end-of-life care (or EoLC) refers to health care, not only of patients in the final hours or days of their lives, but more broadly care of all those with a terminal illness or terminal disease condition that has become advanced, progressive and incurable.
End-of-life care requires a range of decisions, including questions of palliative care, patients' right to self-determination (of treatment, life), medical experimentation, the ethics and efficacy of extraordinary or hazardous medical interventions, and the ethics and efficacy even of continued routine medical interventions. In addition, end-of-life often touches upon rationing and the allocation of resources in hospitals and national medical systems. Such decisions are informed both by technical, medical considerations, economic factors as well as bioethics. In addition, end-of-life treatments are subject to considerations of patient autonomy. "Ultimately, it is still up to patients and their families to determine when to pursue aggressive treatment or withdraw life support."
"End-of-life" (EOL) is a term used with respect to a product supplied to customers, indicating that the product is in the end of its useful life (from the vendor's point of view), and a vendor stops marketing, selling, or rework sustaining it. (The vendor may simply intend to limit or end support for the product.) In the specific case of product sales, a vendor may employ the more specific term "end-of-sale" (EOS). The time-frame after the last production date depends on the product and relates to the expected product lifetime from a customer's point of view. Different lifetime examples include toys from fast food chains (weeks or months), cars (10 years), and mobile phones (3 years).
Product support during EOL varies by product. For hardware with an expected lifetime of 10 years after production ends, the support includes spare parts, technical support and service. Spare-part lifetimes are price-driven due to increasing production costs: when the parts can no longer be supplied through a high-volume production site (often closed when series production ends), the cost increases.
A pile of rancid flesh
A piece of rotten meat
This is all I see
You will fall asleep
Slash your face and cranium
Crack your trachea and your face
I bare my fist through your stomach
and laugh when the scream disappears
The smell from your fried eyes
really make me high
I drink the juice from your lungs
A rancid coctail of life
I'm a psychedelic murderer
who will skin my victims alive
put their tender flesh in my mouth
and eat ruptured kiddneys for fun
Maggots surrounding your body
I'd love to see you die
They eat you from inside
A grotesque end of life
Suck out your blood
The rotten remains I eat
I lick your dismembered organs
and the septic mush from your feet
Maggots surrounding...
Suck out your...
Time has come
to end your life
You will now
suffer and die
Slash your face...
The smell from your...