So thank you to those who have supported me these last few months. Mom passed away on 10/13. We buried her this past Monday. The last weeks of her life were filled with suffering and agony for her, even with hospice caring for her. My heart is aching as I'm still trying to catch up with how this happened so fast and how and why we lost her so quickly. I had a feeling as soon as she was in a facility she would rapidly decline and so she did. I keep thinking I should call her because she is wondering why I haven't. What coping mechanisms have others found useful? Las always, thank for your support and insight.
My deepest condolences to you and your family.
I have lost 3 close family members in the last 18 months. I cared for all of them. Two with Alzheimer's and one with lung cancer. The youngest was 58, the oldest 97.
The last one passed on New Years Eve 2015. The grief process started when the first one passed. Then I was grieving for two and then for three all at the same time. I was paralyzed by depression and "what if" questions. Had I done enough? Made the best decisions? Did I have the right to feel overwhelmed and totally exhausted physically and emotionally? My own health was very poor because I had not taken care of myself over the course of nine long and agonizing years.
For months I sat on my sofa and couldn't handle the smallest tasks that I needed to do to survive. So I prayed and prayed and prayed until I thought surely God was tired of listening to me. Oh, the things I learned were immeasurable and the blessings God sent to me were life lessons that changed my life. Don't get me wrong - I still have some pretty rough days and know there are many still ahead. But through my sadness God taught me how to forgive, how to be grateful, how to let go of bitterness and most importantly how to live in each moment without living in the past or worrying about the future. God showed me that I HAD been good enough, that I had done my very best and that it is now MY time to start living again and it is ok to laugh and sing and dance again if I choose to do so. Life sucks sometimes. But struggles are put in our paths for a reason and to teach us things we need to know. Struggles make us stronger and hopefully wiser. Grief is hard. Very hard - but it is an inevitable part of the cycle of life. I pray daily for all the caregivers of the world. Some of us can do it . . . Others not so much. Take comfort in knowing you had the capacity to do all that you did. No regrets. Time is the greatest healer. It just takes time. In time the vivid memories of the suffering our loved ones endured will fade and be replaced with memories of the good times when they were healthy and cognizant and joyful. Whatever method you choose to get from point A to B and beyond is up to you but know that God wants you to be happy again when the grieving is done. Time and God will heal the pain you are experiencing at this point in your life. I wish you the very best and will keep you and all the other posters that have replied to you in my prayers. I hope some of you will do the same for me.
I am trying to to find a new me. I am trying to take small steps. I went out to dinner Sunday night with my family. Before my father had dementia he would take all of us out for Sunday dinners.
The hospice grief counselor called me this morning. They are sending me a list of grief meetings in my area. I want to do that. I have heard people say that they wished that they had grief counseling.
I am taking one day at a time, which I also did when I was my dad's primary caregiver.
I'm so sorry for your loss. You can take comfort in knowing she is at peace and not in pain anymore. Pennies from heaven is very real; they're a way to let you know your mom is allright.
It's been about a year and a half since my Mom passed and I still haven't found my new normal. In fact, it's when I am doing something that used to be normal for me when Mom was still alive that I miss her the most because the lack of her presence in that moment makes it feel weird and empty. For instance, she and I used to walk to the mall near here and spend the day prowling around and having coffees etc. The other day I walked there by myself which I've done since she died but I usually take a different route than I did when I went with her. This time I went the old way and I could imagine her voice in my head the whole way. All the things that she would say at different points along the route. I appreciated all the fall colors along the way and took pictures with my phone. Which is something I normally wouldn't do but my Mom always appreciated the beauty around her so maybe she was there somewhere influencing me.
Have you talked to her prescibing doctor about the continuation of her symtoms of agitation and fearfulness? Some dementia patients need a combo of meds to address these symptoms. My mom is currently on Lexapro, Remeron and klonopin. So far, it's a combo that keeps her calm and not doped up at all.
There's lots of great sharing in your responses. A grief group helped me, as well as friends who could go with me to do the details of closing an account, picking a gravestone, etc. I also found I needed meds for depression for awhile. Hugs and prayers to you, and take as much time as you need.
Apparently the haircut gave me something new to focus on :) I've been going to the same stylist for 30 years so we both know each others background, so there we were talking about elderly parents [his parents had also passed] and talk politics. It was a fun afternoon. Expensive but well worth it.
I was in disbelief when he passed
And it was difficult to pick up the pieces. However one morning i woke up and felt like I was going to live.
Now 7 yrs later I am able to carry on..
"Fake it til you make it" comes in handy. I must put on a False Normal at work. If I didn't, I'd be out if a job by now. Summoning up the False Normal comes in handy at home and with friends, too. Your loved ones understand....but only up to a certain point. Regulating when I allow myself to be a basket case helps me advance through this murky, unpredictable mental maze.
So much baggage. So much woulda-shoulda-coulda. I spent the past few years immersed in being a hands-on helper, a vigilant observer, a voice of reason. And an intrepid researcher who was always plotting 3 or 4 steps ahead. The phrase "racing thoughts" comes to mind. A lot.
And it was all in service to......an inevitable death. The nasty truth of caregiving. Yours, mine and everyone else's.
"Loss" encompasses so more than the loss of the loved one. In return, our grief defies timetables, tidy definitions and outward signs of improvement.
"I have made death a messenger of joy, wherefore dost thou grieve?"
is one of the most challenging teachings on this that I have encountered. Like everyone else contributing my first reaction usually is to grieve. But when I watched my friend whose mind was shutting down, her passing became a relief because this brilliant lady was now free to be herself again in the spirit world. And as I go through all her things, I learn more and more about her and appreciate her more and more. Sometimes it feels as though she is with me as I work in her condo and it makes me smile.
I am healing thank God, as I've come a long way. Life will never be the same, since We will have to start again, and turn the page and begin a new Chapter of Our own Life, but Life goes on and We will come through it. People always do.
Remember that. Take each day slowly...it takes time for your body,mind,soul to readjust. You have been on High Alert...and now,that situation is gone.It took me over a year to re-adjust.Go for a walk;library;call a friend etc. My deep condolences and prayers are with you.