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Anyone free for a handhold? I’m losing my DM tonight 💔

205 replies

morecoffeeee · 17/08/2025 22:35

4 years I have been her carer, she’s fought through so much but is not strong enough for anymore battles. I’m sat bedside and will stay firmly here for the night - I never knew the end would be so painful to witness. I don’t want to cry because I don’t want her to see, she’s already so distressed. There’s no-one that can sit with me and my heart is smashed into a 1000 pieces 😢

OP posts:
rainbowlou · 18/08/2025 00:02

doodleschnoodle · 17/08/2025 22:41

Sending love.

I read this just before my mum died and it gave me some comfort. I hope it does to you too. Thinking of you x

Expected Death ~ When someone dies, the first thing to do is nothing. Don't run out and call the nurse. Don't pick up the phone. Take a deep breath and be present to the magnitude of the moment.

There's a grace to being at the bedside of someone you love as they make their transition out of this world. At the moment they take their last breath, there's an incredible sacredness in the space. The veil between the worlds opens.

We're so unprepared and untrained in how to deal with death that sometimes a kind of panic response kicks in. "They're dead!"

We knew they were going to die, so their being dead is not a surprise. It's not a problem to be solved. It's very sad, but it's not cause to panic.

If anything, their death is cause to take a deep breath, to stop, and be really present to what's happening. If you're at home, maybe put on the kettle and make a cup of tea.

Sit at the bedside and just be present to the experience in the room. What's happening for you? What might be happening for them? What other presences are here that might be supporting them on their way? Tune into all the beauty and magic.

Pausing gives your soul a chance to adjust, because no matter how prepared we are, a death is still a shock. If we kick right into "do" mode, and call 911, or call the hospice, we never get a chance to absorb the enormity of the event.

Give yourself five minutes or 10 minutes, or 15 minutes just to be. You'll never get that time back again if you don't take it now.

After that, do the smallest thing you can. Call the one person who needs to be called. Engage whatever systems need to be engaged, but engage them at the very most minimal level. Move really, really, really, slowly, because this is a period where it's easy for body and soul to get separated.

Our bodies can gallop forwards, but sometimes our souls haven't caught up. If you have an opportunity to be quiet and be present, take it. Accept and acclimatize and adjust to what's happening. Then, as the train starts rolling, and all the things that happen after a death kick in, you'll be better prepared.

You won't get a chance to catch your breath later on. You need to do it now.

Being present in the moments after death is an incredible gift to yourself, it's a gift to the people you're with, and it's a gift to the person who's just died. They're just a hair's breadth away. They're just starting their new journey in the world without a body. If you keep a calm space around their body, and in the room, they're launched in a more beautiful way. It's a service to both sides of the veil’

I wish so much I had read this when my brother died in March.
we all went into a bit of a panic and got the nurses in immediately and I really regret that.

But posting on here and the support I got helped me through those last days and hours.

Sending you love and hugs x

reginaPhalange1990 · 18/08/2025 00:06

Sending you so much love 🩷 she is lucky to have you xx

OversteppingEx · 18/08/2025 00:11

My DF passed away following a long illness.

Being by his bedside with him during these moments is one of my most precious memories. I felt honoured to be there with him and so much pride.

Sending you courage OP.

Interested in this thread?

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FunnyCrabDance · 18/08/2025 00:12

My thoughts are with you. I also was with my Mum when she died just a few days ago. I wish I'd read the beautiful advice shared here before then.
It will be the hardest thing youve ever done but you can whisper in her ear as she passes just how loved she is and I hope that knowing your loving voice was the last thing she heard will bring you comfort in the future xx

YoniHuman · 18/08/2025 00:12

Sending you a handhold and hug. I lost my DM in December to cancer. I sat with her all night but was not there when she passed. I don’t know how aware she was during the time I was there but I held her hand. I was advised to go home to rest by the doctor when I had been at the hospital 24 hours straight. Other family were with her when she passed away a couple of hours later. I felt guilty for not being there but I’m so glad I demanded to be able to stay with her on what turned out to be her final night. So, if you aren't right by her bedside when she finally slips away, please don’t blame yourself.

ChillWith · 18/08/2025 00:13

Sending love and strength xx

blackfriday1 · 18/08/2025 00:26

Sending love and strength to you and peace to your lovely Mum OP x

Ihad2Strokes · 18/08/2025 00:30

🤚🏼 ❤️ 🖐🏼

all my love

ChrisReaPoppedAnEggInMyBath · 18/08/2025 00:33

I hope, when my time comes, my children can talk about me with the love and warmth you talk about her, OP.

I hope tonight is as painfree and peaceful as possible, for you both. How lucky you were to have had each other, you must have been the most extraordinary comfort for her after your DF died, right through to now.

Sending so much love x

crumblingschools · 18/08/2025 00:35

Sending love and strength @morecoffeeee 💐 Your mum sounds like an amazing woman. Keep those memories tight

NightPuffins · 18/08/2025 00:42

I’m sending you love and a hug. Your mum sounds wonderful and so do you.

Gymnopediegivesmethewillies · 18/08/2025 00:45

To be cherished at the end of your life the way you do with your mum has to be one of the biggest blessings there can be. It sounds as though you loved and deserved one another. She can’t help you now but I hope and believe she will be in a place to watch over you with her blue eyes sparkling, and I hope that’s how you see her too. God bless you both x

FloofyKat · 18/08/2025 00:47

Sending love, strength and a hand-hold x

OrangeCars · 18/08/2025 00:50

I've sat where you're sitting, with my own dear Mum. You're not alone. I'm sending you a huge hug and a handhold.

You're doing a beautiful and brave thing, it's sacred really. She brought you into the world and you're there for her, providing, I'm sure, so much comfort, as she's leaving it.

This bit is so hard. It does eventually get easier. Take it an hour, or minute, at a time and look after yourself. Xx

Teasesall · 18/08/2025 00:50

@morecoffeeee I was you a few months ago. It is one of the hardest things I have done but I am so very glad that I was with my mum when she took her last breath.

I consider myself lucky that my mum was a strong, intelligent and independent woman, as much as she could be for her generation and I was lucky to have her for as long as I did.

Your mum sounds like a good, strong woman too.

Kiss her, thank her & tell her you love her. It's an rare honour to be with her when she moves on.

She will always be with you, sending love ♥️

mumofoneAloneandwell · 18/08/2025 00:53

morecoffeeee · 17/08/2025 23:19

Thank you all for your lovely words ❤️ reading them has made me feel less alone. I’m sat by her hospital bed, it’s silent and eerie apart from her mumbling. The nurses and doctors have been so kind and gentle with me - they already know us both from the countless hospital visits over the past 4 years. The doctor has started to remove her treatment and give her medication to make her comfortable - I don’t know how long that means I have her for but he said at anytime from now.
I’d love to tell you all about her - over a foot smaller than me but a real fiesty little lady, blonde hair and dazzling blue eyes, she was always the first on the dancefloor and the last one to leave.
I used to look at her getting ready for a night on the town with her friends - all perfume, prosecco and luther vandross - I idolised how vibrant she was!
She worked so hard and raised me as a single Mum after my DF passed, always fiercely protective and my biggest cheerleader.
The best, most fun Mum and Nanny to my beautiful DC. 💔

A legacy I'd be very proud to leave, op ❤️

notthatoldchestnut · 18/08/2025 00:55

Sending love OP. I’ve also been in your shoes and waiting is the hardest thing in the world.
I sang amazing grace to my dad and told him it was ok to go because we would be ok. He left us very soon after :(

TheBroonOneAndTheWhiteOne · 18/08/2025 00:55

Lots of love to you @morecoffeeee
It's obvious what she means to you.

LeftieRightsHoarder · 18/08/2025 00:56

She sounds lovely, OP. What a wonderful person to have in your life, and I’m glad she lived to see and love her grandchild too.

Sending you a warm and loving hug, just as she would if she still could.

kiddywinkleyeee · 18/08/2025 00:59

Thinking of you and your lovely Mum . Try and just chat to your Mum about really happy memories in a calm way . Remember that hearing is the last sense to go.
If you think she is even remotely distressed please speak up to the palliative care nurse if available.I send you my best wishes too you and your Mum.🙏Xx

shiningstar2 · 18/08/2025 01:00

Know that strangers across the internet feels for you tonight and are holding you and your mum in their thoughts and prayers ♥️

BollickyBill · 18/08/2025 01:03

Sending love and strength to you and praying for a peaceful passing for your wonderful mam.

namechangedforvalidreasons · 18/08/2025 01:04

Your mum sounds like a big personality in a tiny blue-eyed package. Same as mine. I dwarfed her physically but she was a giant.

She had a terrible time of it too. I was glad to see her distress and suffering end, but the shock of the moment hasn’t left me even though she died six months ago. I loved her so. I am glad you’re there with her for her sake but it’s very hard for you. There is no preparing for it either and even an expected death is shocking in its finality.

What a blessing for your mum to have her lovely daughter by her side. Doesn’t make it easy for you but you love one another and you have been a brilliant daughter and have done so much. Comfort yourself now her journey is coming to an end, that you made her journey out of life a loving one, and there is no-one she could want more to be with her. We are the lucky ones, who get to love and be loved.

God bless you in your solitude and keep you safe tonight. X

tachetastic · 18/08/2025 01:08

Sending you another hand to hold. Your mum sounds amazing. I think you both are very special ladies who clearly love each other very much. She is very proud of you, I am sure.

Horsie · 18/08/2025 01:35

OP, I have done this for my DF about a year ago. Hospice had the following advice:

Latest research says that they think people can hear you up till the end, so speak to them. Speak clearly, close to their ear.

Keep the lights low.

Hold their hand.

Gentle music can be calming.

Keep their mouth and lips moisturised. The nurse gave me some stuff and I used surgical gloves to put it in his mouth.

I told my dad what a great dad he had been, that he was going to be all right, and I passed on messages that family members xxx loved him, and I told him that Mum was waiting for him in heaven.

He would get a bit agitated and I would call the nurse, and she gave him something to calm him. If you're in a facility, see if they have similar if needed.

When it finally happened, it was a blessed relief, and after 24 hours of painful-looking gasping, he just looked as if he'd fallen peacefully asleep, at last.

Sending you lots of hugs xxx