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Luke, I'm so sorry and sad to hear about your huge loss. God bless you for letting your Mom go with the utmost love, kindness and dignity. As others have posted, keeping her on prolonged life support for days or weeks would not have made it easier for anyone, and it would have ended the same way. You might have questioned the decision about when to take her off life support, and the timing would not have tempered your grief. You are grieving the loss of your dear Mom, and the grief alone can stop you from eating or sleeping. Please do not take any blame or guilt for letting her go when she did. Write an open, heartfelt letter to your sisters but don't give it to them; you can decide to give the letter to them later in life or not at all, that's up to you. As they grow older, they might have questions about how your Mom died if they have an opportunity to learn how death really happens.

I was in my 30s when a 45 YO cousin had a stroke and was put on life support. He was brain dead on life support for 5 months until my aunt/uncle decided it was time to let him go (he didn't have a wife or kids). They visited every day, crying and praying for him to "wake up". It was horrible for everyone involved, but it was also a huge relief for his parents after they were able to let him go.
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Luke, God Bless you! Praying for peace and comfort in your mind & heart! God & your mama know your precious heart! Just think, She is dancing with Jesus right now, having a glorious time! I know it hurts right now & it will for awhile. Just please don't get stuck there for too long. Maybe some Grief Support classes online may help. God Bless you!
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Luke, I'm so sorry and sad to hear about your huge loss. God bless you for letting your Mom go with the utmost love, kindness and dignity. As others have posted, keeping her on prolonged life support for days or weeks would not have made it easier for anyone, and it would have ended the same way. You might have questioned the decision about when to take her off life support, and the timing would not have tempered your grief. You are grieving the loss of your dear Mom, and the grief alone can stop you from eating or sleeping. Please do not take any blame or guilt for letting her go when she did. Write an open, heartfelt letter to your sisters but don't give it to them; you can decide to give the letter to them later in life or not at all, that's up to you. As they grow older, they might have questions about how your Mom died if they have an opportunity to learn how death really happens.

I was in my 30s when a 45 YO cousin had a stroke and was put on life support. He was brain dead on life support for 5 months until my aunt/uncle decided it was time to let him go (he didn't have a wife or kids). They visited every day, crying and praying for him to "wake up". It was horrible for everyone involved, but it was also a huge relief for his parents after they were able to let him go.
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Luke, You did the right thing. I think it’s normal to second guess ourselves in these situations. My dad died in August and I went through weeks of second guessing the decisions I made regarding his health. I still find my mind second guessing this, but it is not a constant. I’m so sorry you and your family lost your mom. I pray God’s wisdom, clarity, insight and total peace to envelop you.
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Oh, Luke. I'm so sorry for your loss, and for those last 45 minutes that must have felt somehow like both the longest and shortest time in the world. For what it's worth, I, too, believe you made the right decision. If I am ever where your mom was in that moment, I can only hope that one of my loved ones with the power to make that decision will find the strength in him or herself to let me go.

Try to be as good and kind to yourself now as you were for your mom, okay? What you did for her was one of the hardest things a person *can* do for a person they love ... and you not only did it, but you stayed with her and held her hand as she passed. You were there for her in every way that mattered.
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Your did the right thing. Your mother was "gone" long before you withdrew the life support. There was nothing left but a shell.

As others have noted, the actual "process" of death can be quite unsettling to witness - and not at all like in the movies.

I am so glad that you were there for her during her last moments on earth. This was the best final gift you could have given her.
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You made the right choice.
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I have read every answer here more than once and i wish you all God’s blessings and happy lives with all your families and loved ones. Sincerely.
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LUKE - You are a strong man.

You did the hardest thing anyone could do for their parent. You were strong for protecting your sisters. You were strong for taking the brunt of the situation and making the hardest decision and seeing it through. You were strong for being there with your mother and holding her until her last breath.

Your mother and sisters are lucky to have a you.

My suggestion is to not think about the last 45 minutes. Instead, consciously and purposely recall the good memories you have of her. Let them comfort you during this difficult time.

On a side note, I'm not making comparison or making light here. I raise backyard chickens. Now and then, some of them would get so sick and stop eating. They would slowly starve to death if we didn't put them down. I could never have the nerve to cull a chicken, so I assign the gruesome job to my husband. And I tell him to spare me the details.
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Luke1975 Oct 2020
@ Polarbear
Noted about sparing the details to siblings. Thank you.
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Hi Luke
I was responsible for making decisions for my uncle and I wish I was able to make the decision that you made for your mother because it would have been an upgrade compared to what he had to endure. My uncle had a major stroke April 2, 2019 and I was called. My uncle was transported to a local hospital and then transported by Air Ambulance to a teaching hospital where a procedure was done to try to move the blockage. The doctor's were unsuccessful and stated that they were afraid that they would have killed him if they would have continued. My uncle was on life support for a few days but appeared to come around and was taken off. He never recovered, was transported to a nursing home because he was completely paralyzed on his left side, bedridden and on a feeding tube until his death in June of 2020. I was so distraught that he lived in this condition for almost 15 months (with a plethora of complications). You had the advantage of the doctor's explaining what the outcome would more than likely be. Please be kind to yourself because you made the most gracious decision for your mother under the circumstances. I have learned a lot from that experience and I will not allow my mother who has Alzheimer's and Dementia to suffer like this if I can help it because she has already told me to let her go because she does not want to live like this. Blessings
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U did the right thing! Most of us here have known at least one person who lived as a shell After a stroke.
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Dear Luke, there seem to be several things worrying you. You know that you did the right thing in letting her die, and you have lots of support for that. You are shocked by how the death actually happened. Yes, it is often like that. The ‘death rattle’ can be really frightening, even if you know that it doesn’t cause pain. Very few deaths are like the movies – a few last words, a brave smile and then a last quiet breath. Most times the body fights death, and it’s difficult to be there. You were brave enough to stay and do all the right things there too.

The third thing worrying you is that you haven’t given all the right details to all your sisters. There is no need to, they already know what matters. My husband was in the same place with his brothers – his father died within a few days of his parents’ admission to a nursing home (from a fall on his scooter when he hit his head), and the rules required an autopsy. He had always wanted to give his body to science, and it wasn’t possible after the autopsy. DH chose not to tell his mother or brothers about the autopsy, as ‘cutting him up for nothing’ would have upset them for no benefit to anyone.

Let the last hours fade gradually from your memory. I think it’s like the way you can only see the foothills when you are close to them. As you get further away, you can see the mountains behind. The mountains are the good memories from a whole life, not just the close end. Love, Margaret
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You did the right thing for your mother, even though you're hurting and questioning yourself. "Life" for her after such a tragic event, had she lived, would have been awful........nothing that anyone would want to endure. I know that what you went through was the worst 45 minutes of your life, and it probably felt like 5 hours, and I can't imagine how terrible it must have been. But your mom is at peace now, with God, and out of pain and feeling free and happy once again. When I read the eulogy at my dad's funeral, I rejoiced in the fact that I knew he was dancing once again, instead of constricted to a wheelchair and suffering.

Celebrate your mother's life now, and try to put the image of her last moments out of your mind. You did the right thing, out of pure love, and she's thanking you from the other side.

Sending you a big hug and a prayer for peace.
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Aw Luke, my heart goes out to you. I know how you feel. I had to make the sad decision to put my mom on comfort care which is basically removing all life sustaining measures and administering morphine as needed. I too made the decision without much input from my siblings. At the time I thought death would be immediate but my mom lingered for six very long days. I sat by her side through most of it. I thought I'd never get those images out of my head but I did. It takes time but it will happen

You know what? Your mother knows you did what was best for her. Do not second guess yourself. I know it's hard but it would have been much harder if you had not made that decision and you had to witness a much more difficult deterioration. Imagine yourself in the same position and I think you would want someone to do for you what you did for your mother.

Try not to think of her last minutes but instead think of how much you loved one another and the good times you had while she was alive.

God Bless you!
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notgoodenough Oct 2020
(((hugs))) to you as well, Gershun.
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Luke...you have absolutely nothing to feel guilty for the decision you made. The drs told you what hapoen, in my opinion you did the honorable thing to let her go, rather than stay on life support and suffer.... you are grieving for your sweet mother, each day you will grow a little stronger. I suggest seeing a grief counselor, they will be able to help you immensely. Im so sorry for th loss of your mom. I had to make that same decision for my grandmother. Its not easy even tho i knew thats what she wanted. She had DNR and i was her health and financial POA and took care of her small estate. I took care of her the last 5 years of her life as we had always been close. But i know shes in heaven and no longer suffering in her earthly body. Love and blessings to you. liz
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You have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to justify or regret. You asked many times for medical input and received it..

I think what you’ve written is both beautiful and poetic. Make a copy for yourself, of what you’ve written here. You honored her in every way possible, and remained with her in the hardest moments that any of us will ever know. You never left her side, and you Blessed her in her departing.

Be at Peace with what has happened. Yours is a Peace well deserved. She was fortunate to have had children who loved her so dearly, and especially to have a child who until her last moments never left her side.
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Luke, I am so very sorry on the loss of your mother. You absolutely did the right thing!! My mother told me a long time ago that she never wanted to be kept alive on life support. If she was brain dead she did not want to continue on life support.
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Thank you so much for all the answers. I will never keep the truth way from my other 2 sisters but I know they’re not ready as of right now, soon i will tell them all.
I appreciate each and every answer, i would like to answer and thank each individually but right now i have no time. Thank you and of course I appreciate your honesty.
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CarolLynn Oct 2020
Luke, you don't have to worry about getting the 45 minutes out of your head. The truth is: you probably never will. But what WILL happen is that you'll be able to reframe it as time goes on. When you think of those moments, you'll realize that you assisted her spirit/energy to escape from an already dead body and you will appreciate yourself for allowing her to move on.
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First, my heart goes out to you, no matter what the circumstances this kind of decision and witnessing the end of a loved ones life is always emotional and difficult. You obviously had the legal authority to make this decision for your mom which means she trusted your love for her and ability to do what was best for her no matter how hard, which is exactly what you did.

Based on your description your mom wasn’t on life support while they worked to heal her, she was on life support while she continued to slip away and was nearing the point where her body was kept alive but she had no quality of life or even life that she was still aware of. This means her body was or was about to be alive, kept alive for her familys emotional well being not for hers. Perfectly understandable and not uncommon, don’t get me wrong but what you did was the loving and maybe most difficult thing, you put your mother ahead of yourself and your sisters, you took the lead and did what she trusted you to to do. Unless you know your mother would have wanted her body to continue breathing so her family could drag out the emotional toll of watching her wither away, hooked up to machines you did the thing that gave your mom dignity and saved her family drawn out suffering. The truth is even if you had waited a year with her on life support pulling the plug so her body could actually pass wouldn’t be any easier, same emotional pain and mourning you are all experiencing now. I think you made the right decision for your mom and for her family.

The only thing that gives me a little pause is carrying out the decision without giving your sisters the opportunity to be there with her as well or know that’s what was happening. You obviously gave this a lot of thought and you know your family better than anyone so I’m guessing this was probably the best for them and you knew they didn’t want to be there or know exactly when it was happening but again that laid an even heavier burden on you not having your siblings to cry with and share that 45 min with. It’s done now though and it sounds like you are still protecting your sisters by sharing with each of them what you think they can handle, just remember that sometimes people will surprise you, able to handle more than you think and even being relieved and appreciative after the fact, no always but carrying this secret from some of your sisters for the rest of your lives is a heavy burden you don’t have to bear.

The spring of my Freshman year in HS I was in NY at a Model UN event when my grandfather, whom I was very close to, committed suicide. My mother elected not to tell me because she didn’t want me coming back on the train alone knowing he had passed. My parents were divorced, each married to other people and still great friends but instead of having my Dad go get me she had her husband waiting for me when I got home 3 days later and only let him tell me my GF had passed, nothing more. I’m not even sure he was supposed to tell me that, he was supposed to just take me up to my grandparents house immediately with no explanation but I wasn’t having that. She resisted telling me how he died for as long as she could but I wasn’t accepting her cryptic answers. The entire family had been together mourning together for 3 days and I walked in with this fresh news no time to digest before the funeral the next morning, it was a blur and while I totally understand why she did it the way she did and have long since forgiven her, it took me years to come to terms with the way I found out, I felt so guilty having a great time in NYC while I should have been home with my family and I do wish she had simply sent my dad or her husband to get me.Not the same I know but she didn’t have to put herself through the stress I’m sure she did with me not knowing for days and how to tell me or the guilt of not telling me sooner after the fact.
Take care of yourself too, you have taken care of Mom and sisters so well. My heart to you all.
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Luke1975 Oct 2020
Hi Lymie61
From Sunday night which i drove and found my mother on ER next to 2 of my sisters to Tuesday night We all kept going into the ER then ICU to visit our mother and the staff made an exception since there was zero visitors allowed due to covid19 here in CA.
The doctors i think were making this exception giving us time to decide then i think when they noticed that none of us would even dare make this decision they no longer would let anyone in anymore. During these three days i didnt see any other visitors inside ICU except us.
my sisters clearly would say out loud they cant even imagine pulling the plug on her because they would see my mother breathing through the tube and she looked like sleeping but totally unresponsive for three days, like dead.
Then on Wednesday morning i went alone and told the doctor on the phone to let me in because i needed to talk to him. He came out to the door to let me inside, i saw my mother, the same breathing Through a tube eyes shut and unresponsive in everyway. I spend some time alone with her and told the doctor if i decide to do it i cant be here but for now i need to go outside and smoke a cigarette and think.
I came back inside and decided to stay by her side and go through with it without consulting any of my sisters because just the idea of pulling her plug made them scream into tears during the days and nights of visits by her bed. So i knew i didn't need to consult them because they would have not being able to handle it and watch me go through with it.
so i called them all after she passed when I was next to my mother. 2 of them i told the truth and the other 2 i will tell them.
when i say “i have to live with it for the rest of my life” i meant with the decision that i made and the images but for sure i will tell the rest of my siblings that i made the decision all on my own.
something really strange happened, the moment my mum passed my crying and tears stopped right after her last deep breath. When my sisters showed up to the room, i was very quite and no tears at all. They of course Started crying uncontrollably and i was the one telling them to relax and hold themselves trying to comfort them.
I hope was her soul making me strong and not something worst.

Once again thank you to everyone for the comforting words and thank you so much for the way you helped me how to think about this with your analytical ethical and philosophical skills.
I stumbled in here asking google for answers to my very fragile state and i am thankful to all of you for helping. Im still in a dark place but i think i will manage. I keep going into waves of bursting into tears then calm back and fourth.
thank you.
but you’re right, i cant get that 45 minutes out of my head, i dont think i ever will but i know i will manage.
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I am so sorry for your loss and what you went through.

What you may want to do is see if there is a grief councillor at the hospital you can talk this through with. But I think with the info you were given, you made the right decision. See, thats all the Nurses and Doctors can give you, the information. They are not allowed to tell u yes you should do you shouldn't do. You've got to read between the lines.

A week before my Mom passed I had a call from the nurse at her NH. At this point Mom had not been out of bed for a week. The Nurses could not get her up, she fought them so I told them let her be. Well now she had a swallowing problem. The doctor had OKd to have her sent to the hospital to have a swallow test. I asked questions, the nurse answered but seemed a little hesitant. Like she was waiting for me to say something. I kept thinking Mom does not want to be poked and prodded anymore. So I said "Call Hospice in". I think the whole conversation she was trying to tell me "its time". But as a Nurse she is not allowed to recommend hospice. I could hear it in her voice she was so glad I finally "got it". My Mom went peacefully 6 days later.

Find peace in knowing you did what Mom would have wanted. No one wants to live as a shell of themselves.
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So sorry this happened to you. There was no other choice. She was not aware of that last struggle. She was already gone. It was brave of you to both make the decision and to be there with her. May you soon come to closure and find peace in your heart.
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I spent my life as an RN. I guarantee you that you did the right thing. For your mother to have had to suffer on in a vegetative state would have been hideously cruel. You are grieving and questioning this and part of that questioning comes of not having been entirely honest with the siblings. Whatever they would have said, or will say, you did the right thing for your Mother. I am so sorry for your loss. You were guided by good medical advice, you did what you had to do. The sad thing about ever placing heroic measures on someone is that in cases such as this someone has to make the decision to withdraw them. They were all that was keeping your mother alive, and that wasn't really life. IMHO you did this exactly right. Sometimes we spend time questioning ourselves because it seems that there is some way we don't have to move into the grief and loss. I hope you will soon come to a point where you can celebrate the life and love you all shared.
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(((hugs))) Luke, I am so sorry about your mom. I know what you're suffering right now.

My dad also dies of a brain bleed when I was very young. Even on life support, his body only lasted 4 days - and I say it like that because my dad was long gone before his body stopped working. Once there's that much damage to the brain and it can no longer function, it just takes a few days for the body to "catch up", so to speak.

Unfortunately, unless someone is blessed like my husband's grandmother - who lived to be almost 99 years old, healthy and fully mentally cognizant, and died instantaneously of an MI - most of us will have to make a horrific choice concerning the end of our loved ones lives - life support? Hospice? Administration of pain relieving drugs, even if it hastens death? Leave it in the hands of the Almighty? You made the right decision, and you made it out of love for your mom. You were with her at the end, you ensured she did not pass alone, nor in pain. That's all any of us can hope to do.

If I ever find myself in the position your mom was in, I hope my kids can be as strong as you and loving as you and make the decision to let me go peacefully, rather than leave me "alive", a shell of my former self.

May you find peace and comfort in the good memories of mom.
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I am very sorry for the loss of your mother. That was a very painful but brave decision you made. I'm sure mom would not have been happy with her so called life as it was. Thank you for releasing her to give her peace and help end her suffering. You gave shared the truth about her last hour with 2 of your sisters. Allow yourself to grieve as long as you need. There is no time limit. Then recall all the beautiful memories you have with her. My sweet daddy passed last June and many days are still hard. God bless you.
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I am so sorry for the loss of your mother who you loved so much. You did show her the ultimate love when you decided to listen to the Dr's and take her off of the life support, even as difficult as that was. You know deep in your heart that your mom wouldn't of wanted to lay and linger like she was, for who knows how long.

Your mom I'm sure is thanking you for your bravery in making such a difficult decision on her behalf. You said it yourself that you did for her what you would want someone to do for you under the circumstances, so please don't second guess yourself, just take this time to mourn the mom you loved so much, and remember all the good times you had with her.

I am praying that God will wrap His arms around you, and give you His peace and comfort.
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Luke, I’m so sorry for your loss. Losing a mom is unique, when you’re close, it’s just a special kind of hurt. My mother had several small strokes that she recovered from quickly and well. These were strokes caused by clots. Then came a much different thing, a stroke that was from a bleed, the consequences were devastating. Though she got immediate care, she lost every ability, and I mean every. She couldn’t sit up, roll over, lost speaking, couldn’t read, couldn’t eat, couldn’t go to the bathroom, couldn’t even scratch an itch. She was trapped in a body that would do nothing for her. The difference between my mother and yours is that mine was never on life support and our family had a team of doctors heavily encouraging us that she’d recover. No recovery ever came, despite many attempts at therapies, and trying all we could think of. She spent the next four years in the most miserable life I’ve ever witnessed in a nursing home, unable to do even the simplest thing. I’ll never know how she survived it. She was mentally intact but physically completely gone. You were presented a bit of a different set of circumstances, but I believe you received solid advice and acted in your mother’s best interests to spare her a life that would be no life at all. It would have been, at most, a life of pain and endless indignities. Your mother was blessed to have you looking out for her. Though that 45 minutes was terrifying for you, your mother, her essence, her personality and spirit were already gone, her body was just catching up, and that’s so hard to watch. Please know it’s never a bad idea to get some grief counseling as you walk through this, and know that your mom would be proud of you
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You absolutely did the right thing. I had a similar situation when my father was very ill and had a crisis while in the hospital, He was on life support, feeding tube, etc. The doctor said many of the same things the doctors told you and I agreed to cease life support. I've never forgotten what the doctor said after I'd made the decision: "Your father would thank you if he could." The doctor was right. Please think about that.

I am so sorry for your loss. I wish you peace and sttrength.
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Luke1975 Oct 2020
The doctor said exact same thing to me minutes before taking her off life support while he was there in the room with me by my mother. He took another look at her condition before he walked out of the room then looked at me nodding his head in approval and said: I think you doing the right thing.
Based on his body language and demeanor he was glad/proud of me that i took his advise. Days prior while talking to him he has seen me in tears hoping i can get better answers from him and he would bluntly tell me: sorry, i wish i have better news for you.

Im so sorry for your loss HDee and what you went through but your words and everyone’s words in this thread have helped me tremendously.
I have avoided talking much with friends and relatives paying their condolences to me (which I'm thankful) because as you said, i feel utterly alone. They simply assume she just passed and i’ve spared the details with everyone who shakes my hand so thank you and everyone in here from the bottom of my heart.
Im the type of person That spends days and nights torturing myself if i feel like i have hurt someones feelings by saying to much or acting insensitive towards them so you can imagine how i been torturing my soul Reflecting what if I made the most horrific mistake a man can possibly ever make? Anyway,
Thank you and God bless you.
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Great big warm hug!

You are an awesome son. It took love beyond measure to step up and give her the peace that she would have never had living in her broken body.

May God give you strength and peace for doing the right thing for your mom, may HE give you grieving mercies during this difficult time.

My grandmother had a series of strokes that killed a large portion of her brain. She didn't die but, she existed for approximately 12 years as a body. It was truly the saddest situation I can imagine and I believe to this day that there are things worse than death, this being one.

You can rest knowing that you did the very best thing for her.
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Prayers for strength for you in this time. But you did the best thing for her. No more suffering. She would have made the same decision for you based on all the info. Just remember she loved you and you her.
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