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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to be furious with my DM for screwing up my perfect future?

169 replies

ICBINEG · 28/11/2012 12:15

It was all very simple....she and my DF were going to move to the seaside and live in a beach hut...the grandchildren would go visit and learn to build sandcastles....

Instead my DM is dying and has been given a low chance of making it through another year.

How can my DM possibly teach my DD to knit/sew/cook and a million other things she was supposed to do if she doesn't make it to my DD second birthday?

How can she have screwed up the very simple task of staying alive till at least 100?

On a scale of 1 to massively U, how U is it that anger is forming a significant part of my reaction to this news?

Please come tell me this is normalish or shout some fecking compassion into me or something...anything.

OP posts:
hygienequeen · 28/11/2012 12:58

Thanks xxxxx

CalamityJones · 28/11/2012 13:01

Take lots of photos - I wish I had so many more of my mum and my baby daughter, I really cherish the ones I have.

Cantbelieveitsnotbutter · 28/11/2012 13:02

That's awful xxx thinking of you and your family xx

Not sure if someone suggested this already but why don't you ask her to make videos on how to knit, sew etc.

StickEmWithThePointyEnd · 28/11/2012 13:09

I'm sorry to hear your news OP, my mum died very suddenly just over a week ago. I'm 23 and have a 2 year old ds. My mum was only 57.

My mum spent a long time (like over 15 years) in a very bad place emotionally. In the last six months or so she was actually getting better. She wanted to live. She wanted to see ds grow up. She was a fantastic gm to him, it is breaking my heart that he won't know her.

I have no one left to "look after" me. I am officially the oldest person (on my side) of the family. It's shit and completely unfair.

Startail · 28/11/2012 13:09

I'm angry that DMIL died when DD1 was two and all that DD2 got was a her pretty name.

I'm furious that she never met DSILS beautiful DCs!

I think we are all angry when we have to say goodbye to people we love before we are ready. I think we are angrier still when they aren't ready either.

YANBU to be angry, hugs and strength

BettySwollocksandaCrustyRack · 28/11/2012 13:10

Yes get a family shoot. I dont have nearly enough photos of my mum with my DS and then when I really wanted some she was so ill and looked dreadful. Bless her, I don't want to remember her like that and no way would she have agreed anyway.

If your mum is well enough just talk loads, get family history, ask her silly things like her favourite song etc etc......cherish the time you have especially whilst she is feeling well x

AFingerofFudge · 28/11/2012 13:13

It is a completely and utterly shit thing to happen and am so sorry you have to face this!

My mum died on Christmas Day 1985 when I was 15 and I am still furious!!!
I've just taken up knitting and am crap at it. She was an amazing knitter and I need her here to show me what to do

So in a nutshell...YANBU
x

prettybird · 28/11/2012 13:15

I forgot about being angry at the sight of tall, elegant 70+ year olds. That's what my mum should have been like. I find myself resenting the fact that they're alive and she's not. :(

Dh and I still talk often at "new" things (like when ds was competing at our new velodrome) about how much my mum would've loved it.

You learn to accept that such talk is normal and is honouring her memory.

In the mean time - you have the time to talk to your mum. ThanksThanks to both you and your mum.

BettySwollocksandaCrustyRack · 28/11/2012 13:17

Pretty - I do the same. If I see an old lady with white hair I feel all bitter and think to myself how unfair it is that they are alive and she didnt make it.

Northernlurker · 28/11/2012 13:17

This is a very moving thread. We only needed another 16 months for my grandfather to have met dd1. He would have found her so amusing and wonderful.

spiderlight · 28/11/2012 13:18

So sorry :(

DowntonTrout · 28/11/2012 13:19

You know, dad didn't want any photos taking of him when he was dying. Thank fully I had plenty from before.

It may be difficult to ask your mum to do things like writing cards or recording things for the future. I know I wouldn't have felt right asking.

Your world will become smaller over the next few months, as will your DMs. In the end with dad, his world was just my house. Anything that went on outside those 4 walls was insignificant. His pleasure was a bowl of fresh strawberries or an ice lolly. It is those things I remember the most.

And towards the end I actually wished he would die, just not wake up. Of course now I'd give anything for a few more minutes with him, but then, in the middle of it all I just wanted it to be over.

There will be huge conflicts in your feelings. So many of us on here have been through this. keep posting because it really helps to know that people understand.

ICBINEG · 28/11/2012 13:20

Thank you all so much for your thoughts and support - it has massively helped getting my head in the right place for facing the rest of the work day.

I am loving some of the ideas put forward and will be chasing them up over the xmas break.

Thanks
OP posts:
Alibabaandthe40nappies · 28/11/2012 13:23

Oh OP I'm so sorry for you all, and yes anger is a perfectly natural response.

I am sad and angry every day that my lovely Grandma didn't get to come to my wedding, she died 6 months before. I would so have loved her to be there, and to meet my lovely DSs - she would just adore them both.

You are not selfish, your hopes and dreams need to undergo a huge shift and you weren't prepared for that. None of us are.

Keep talking on here, you will soon realise that you will find the right words in RL. x

WilsonFrickett · 28/11/2012 13:26

The thing is my love, when you are teaching your DD to do a million things (including especially when you're telling her what not to do), you'll hear your mother's voice in you. She has spent her life teaching you to be a mother and that will never be lost.

Hopefully one day that will comfort you, but for now, rant away. She is BU! [hugs]

parsnipcake · 28/11/2012 13:27

It's normal, and totally ok. YouTube can teach the knitting and stuff - it makes me feel so close to my gran and mum when I see my daughter crochet like they did.

ICBINEG · 28/11/2012 13:28

Right, work is calling but I will read everything when I get home - please don't feel your comments aren't being appreciated!

OP posts:
herethereandeverywhere · 28/11/2012 13:28

I understand that it's a completely normal reaction and I'm so sorry for you and your family Sad

But your mum and you sound so lovely. Please spend this last precious year revelling in that loveliness and soaking it up like a sponge. Fill the time creating all those special memories, record her stories, get some knitting and baking tutorials.

My mum is still of this earth but is a chain smoking alcoholic. I'd love to have a proper conversation (that she remembered) or trust her to be alone with my DDs but it's never going to happen.

You're rightfully devastated and bloody angry. But please clear a little space for the joy that your mum obviously brings to you and your family and make every precious moment count because you're so fortunate to have her now.

drjohnsonscat · 28/11/2012 13:29

oh my gosh, I'm so sorry. I can completely understand. Your post also made me count my blessings. You are right - you should be able to expect your parents to be around to watch your family grow. I would be angry with her too - I would also be angry with everyone who isn't facing what you are facing (eg, me). All fair. Very fair. All that can be said is that at least you know, absolutely viscerally, what she means to you and perhaps when the anger has subsided a little, you can share with her what she is to you. I'm sure she knows anyway but it's good to say it again.

Flimflammery · 28/11/2012 13:32

ICBNIG: yes, be furious, it's not fair. My mother died two years ago this month, and I sometimes feel really angry with my dad for being the one to still be alive (he's older and in worse health, no-one expected her to die first - and I was closer to her). Imagine how guilty that makes me feel.

minouminou · 28/11/2012 13:33

Absolutely not unreasonable, OP.
It's quite healthy in fact.

DP's brother died 13 years ago now, and I occasionally get angry because he died years before the DC arrived. He'd have been a great uncle.
DS is six now, and he talks about him a bit, and as he gets older I'm sure we'll go more in depth about him.

It feels like you're suddenly up against a really annoying (that's the only word I can think of) brick wall that really pushes your nose back, and you feel quite spited by life.

PessaryPam · 28/11/2012 13:35

So sorry ICBINEG. Had the same with my DM. It's totally and utterly unfair.

DowntonTrout · 28/11/2012 13:35

Oh yes, the GUILT flimflammery.

That is the hardest and most unreasonable feeling of all!

Proudnscary · 28/11/2012 13:36

I'm really, really sorry ICBNIG x

piprabbit · 28/11/2012 13:41

Don't save the photos for a special shoot (have that too Grin) take a million and one photos of your DM with you and your family, doing ordinary things, looking like and acting just like your mum.
My DDad lost his DM at 18yo and my DH lost his DF at 25yo - they both have only a couple of pictures each. But on my maternal side, we have hundreds of photos, the love letters my GPs wrote to each other while they courted, all sorts of tiny memories that build up into a life. The special photos are the ones where they are caught by surprise and are laughing together.

Also - could you ask your DM to record herself reading some bedtime stories to your DD? It is technically much simpler than trying to produce a half decent video, and listening to a voice in the quiet of a darkened room is very special and intimate.

I'm so sorry that you are all having to go through this. It is shit and anger is a very reasonable reaction to a completely reasonless situation. But anger can be positive too. Feeling anger can motivate people to take action - perhaps your anger now will help you find some special ways to grab on to and celebrate every moment with your DM.