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Bereavement

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My mum has gone.

135 replies

Mouseface · 25/11/2013 18:08

I'm so sorry but this is going to be very long.

My wonderful mum passed away, aged just 59, in my arms, on Saturday morning at 3.20am, with her children, husband and her closest sister all holding a part of her fragile frame.

She told me she would never forgive me for moving away from my home town, ever. I can't get that out of my head but I hope that now, maybe she will, and in time those words will fail but it was the last thing of any clarity that she said to me.

My parents found out on Wednesday that she had very aggressive lung cancer (Adenocarcinoma) and Lymphangitis which meant it had spread to her lymph nodes, it had taken hold so terribly quickly, (I knew when I saw her a few weeks ago that she had cancer, she had that 'look' and I told my dad that, I knew, I just knew, when he emailed me saying it was a just chest infection and that her MS was causing complications), that she wouldn't have coped with chemo or any kind of treatment come to think of it.

I think that she was fully aware of the fact that she had mere hours and not days, but she sat there telling us all that she was going shopping to get new PJs etc on Monday (today) when we all knew that she'd never see the sun rise on that Saturday morning. Sad

They'd already drained 3 litres of blood from her left lung on Wednesday and said that they'd try to drain more blood from her lungs if she wanted but they said it would reabsorb.....

In other words, they were telling her there was no point putting her through such an uncomfortable procedure, when she only had hours to live.

She was very lucid and alert at times, talking as best she could to us about things that she'd done in her past, the things that we, her children, had gotten up to, and at others she was very distressed as she couldn't breathe.

I sort of pulled rank as my dad had gone for a much needed rest and asked for some metazalan, just to take the edge off her anxiety, she was already on morphine but I knew that we were all just doing palliative care when I walked into her room to find no monitors,, no drips, nothing - 'no alarms and no surprises'.

My aunt and I washed her, massaged her hands and feet as they'd swollen, she'd started to get sores and I asked for her to be catheterised, because she couldn't feel when she was weeing so they'd put pads in her underwear.

She was able to sip water but nothing else. They removed her NG when I got there and it was covered in blood, I was the only one with them in the room.

We took breaks and tried to have some food, always leaving two people with her to help her sit forward when she needed it but as the night drew in, we all knew that it was coming, death, it was so cold in that room and yet so very hot in the rest of the ward.

She grew more pale and but became increasingly restless so again, I asked them for some sedation, they gave her some more morphine, sedation and finally, finally, she stopped fighting and went to sleep. Peace filled the room, the silence was suddenly so loud, we could all hear the 'rattle' and that it wouldn't belong and to be very honest, I was wishing the time away as I watched her change before my eyes.

We all stood, all at once, just before she left us, as if we knew, not saying a word to one another. I was the second to hold her, to save goodbye, my younger sister first, she stopped breathing in my arms and I checked her pulse, told my dad she'd gone, made my brother say goodbye and then dad held her.

He broke down, begging, screaming and pleading with her to come back, asking her what he'd do now? What would her do without her to look after, he needed her, time and again asking her to come back, change her mind.

That was crippling to see. She was only 59. We managed to get him to sit once he'd let that out but I will never, ever forget that or the way she looked when she left her body.

I managed to get some time alone with her once she'd gone, as we waited for the nursing staff to come and arrange her, so I held her close and told her that there would be no more pain, no more medication, or tests, or fear, or worry, no more waking wondering how much her body would ache that day, or go to bed wondering if she's wake and be able to move because of her MS.

I told her that we'd moved to give DD and DS (Nemo, she loved calling him Nemo - our little survivor) a better quality of life and that if we hadn't, Nemo might not have made it because we'd have been assigned to a different hospital and everything happens for a reason.

DD has a boyfriend and is so happy at school, has wonderful friends, and is at last settled here, as are we. I told her to go and find the friends that she'd lost, our family who had gone before her, that they'd be waiting for her and just how much I loved her and always would. The nurses came in and I let them do what they needed.

I told her I'd look after dad and I stayed with him until DH came on Sunday for me at 3.30pm, then we left Dad to grieve, be with her, walk around the house, doing what he had to.

I slept in her sewing room, with her things around me for a few hours and let him sleep until he woke around 1pm, and then people came to see him, quick drink and left, knowing he needed to be left.
Everyone who needed to know, knows, and he has lots of support where he lives, and around but I'm so scared that he may give up, he might just stop. He is so fragile, and so lost without her, his best friend and the love of his life. Sad

I could sense her here on Saturday night, I could smell her hair as they'd showered her and blow dried her hair that morning, before I got there... she wanted to 'look nice for me'

I'm not sure what I'm going to do without my mum, DD (almost 15) knows and dreadfully upset, she was so very close to her, even though we live away from there now. Nemo wouldn't understand. He didn't even ask where she was.... he has a mental age of 2.5/3 even though he's 5 in May so why would he? We'll tell him when he asks and if the time feels right before then.

Sorry for any typos and for such a long sad post but I wanted to let this out, and here was the only place to do that without being scared to say the words I needed to. Sad

I've arranged the flowers and the announcement for the newspaper as my father had asked me to today.... now we just have to wait until next Wednesday when we get to say goodbye one last time.

I know that it won't be my mum in the coffin, it's just the body she was given... I know that she will remain close to us all, even though we live somewhere else now and the fact that she is no longer be in pain, suffering, day in, day out is such a comfort but I know that her leaving hasn't really sunk in yet.

Maybe it will next week......

Thank you for reading this. xx

OP posts:
WheresMyCybermat · 28/11/2013 16:24

So so sorry for your loss Mouse Thanks xx

madmouse · 28/11/2013 18:01

Mouse Nathan was 18 months old when my MIL died. He was in the room when it happened and refused to go to sleep - he just knew. Ever after whenever dh cried he pootled over, patted his cheek and made soothing noises. He spent the entire funeral emptying a bag of nappybags...

As long as they are allowed to see what is going on and don't have to guess at it I believe kids cope well with adult tears.

Mouseface · 28/11/2013 21:48

Oh MadMouse - They just know don't they? I think Nemo more so than DD..... he senses so much more because other parts of him are less up to speed if that makes sense? xxx Give him a squidge from me xxx

Big hugs to you all, and thanks xxx Thanks

OP posts:
IamtheZombie · 28/11/2013 22:44

Mouse, Zombie is thinking of you every day and sending you all the love and strength she can. xxx

Mouseface · 28/11/2013 23:03

Thanks Zombie - I'm guessing that I know you outside of MN? Head is f''cked just now. Sorry if I don't know you outside of MN but you are luffly :)

Thank you, thank you all xxx

OP posts:
IamtheZombie · 28/11/2013 23:09

Have PMd you, Mouse. xxx

timidviper · 28/11/2013 23:16

Mouseface So sorry to hear your news

halfthesize · 29/11/2013 11:51

my thoughts are with you mouse Sad

Mouseface · 29/11/2013 13:10

Thanks Zombie :)

We've just arrived in a very grey, cold and wet Manchester. This time last week we were in a different part, different hospital, not knowing it would be the last time I'd ever see or hold my mum. :(

OP posts:
mummytowillow · 29/11/2013 13:13

Mouse, I'm so very sorry. Your post is beautiful and brought a tear to my eye x

Rosa · 29/11/2013 13:17

Wishing you and your family continued strength not just now but also in the future...So sorry for you loss.

shabbatheGreek · 29/11/2013 13:32

So very sad to read about your Mum. Sending my families love to your family. For what its worth I dont think we should hide our sadness from our children. It teaches them that its fine to show emotions. I think that children see everything, including death, in either black or white, as long as they are not lied to (because they know fibs instantly) they will grow more confident. Us adults 'swim' in the grey bit between the black or white. We think of the 'what ifs' and the 'if onlys' - wish we could be more child like.

Your precious Mum was so young - only two years older than me. I cant imagine your grief. My parents are both very seriously ill - my beloved Dad has oral cancer Sad I know that in a short time I will be where 'you are now.' When the time comes I will read this thread again and draw strength and comfort from it.

My Dad and I talked the other day. He is so scared. I said to him 'Oh Dad can you imagine the wonderful welcome you are going to get? Your Mum who loved you beyond anything or anybody else, your 3 aunties and my two sons trying to push their way to the front to see their lovely Grandad.' He thought for a little while and said 'I never thought of it like that love, I will look after your boys like I did when they were with us and keep them safe till the day we are all re-united.'

If you ever need to talk just PM on here - will always listen xxx

mrswarbouys · 29/11/2013 14:04

Very best and warmest hugs to you Mouse. Your dear Mum will live in your heart for ever. I lost my darling dad 5 years ago and I dream of him all the time. I still wake up crying. But slowly it's starting to be a part of my life that has to go on.

Kyrptonite · 29/11/2013 14:16

That post was beautiful. Thinking of you and sorry for your loss xx

MimsyBorogroves · 29/11/2013 14:22

I'm so sorry for your loss, Mouseface.

Thinking of you and your family x

SpaceKoala · 29/11/2013 14:34

So very sorry for your loss.Sad
Sitting here in years, you write beautifully. Brought back a lot of memories.

SpaceKoala · 29/11/2013 14:34

Tears, not years

JugglingFromHereToThere · 29/11/2013 15:14

What a very lovely conversation to have with your Dad, Shabba x
Like you I feel I have much to learn from Mouse's lovely post and thread.
Hope the weather picks up a bit in Manchester mouse - it's been very windy here today.

Mouseface · 30/11/2013 04:26

At 3.20am, this time last week, I was holding my mum for the final time. By now, she'd lost her biggest, toughest and most brutal battle so far.

I woke at 3.14am to Nemo calling for me. I wasn't really sleeping. I could sense her, mum. I knew the time was almost upon me. Funny how your mind works. Sad

Thank you all so much. xxx

OP posts:
BIWI · 30/11/2013 09:46

Oh Mouse Sad I haven't been around much recently so I didn't see your post. I'm so sorry. She was so young too.

Grief is uncharted territory for all of us. There is no right or wrong way to go about it - you just get through it in whatever way makes sense to you. (Although not much makes sense about grief, to be honest)

When my mum died (she had cancer, but died from organ failure after contracting an infection, so it was horribly quick), my dad talked about dreaming about her a lot. And I was jealous Blush because she wasn't in my dreams, and I so wanted her to be. Silly thing, really.

Please look after yourself. Don't try and do too much, and be kind to yourself. And let other people be kind and help you as well.

With much love to you all xxx
Flowers

NearTheWindmill · 30/11/2013 10:46

Shabba, I think that too. Mouse, take care - a week is the first anniversary - the anniversaries are tough but the hurt fades as the happier times and memories surface. And they do xx

shabbatheGreek · 30/11/2013 15:50

The Dash
by Linda Ellis copyright 1996

?I read of a man who stood to speak
at the funeral of a friend.
He referred to the dates on her tombstone
from the beginning…to the end.

He noted that first came the date of her birth
and spoke of the following date with tears,
but he said what mattered most of all
was the dash between those years.

For that dash represents all the time
that she spent alive on earth.
And now only those who loved her
know what that little line is worth.

For it matters not, how much we own,
the cars…the house…the cash
What matters is how we live and love
and how we spend our dash.

So, think about this long and hard.
Are there things you’d like to change?
For you never know how much time is left
that can still be rearranged.

If we could just slow down enough
to consider what’s true and real
and always try to understand
?the way other people feel.

And be less quick to anger
and show appreciation more
and love the people in our lives
like we’ve never loved before.

If we treat each other with respect
and more often wear a smile,
remembering that this special dash
might only last a little while.

?So, when your eulogy is being read,
with your life’s actions to rehash…
would you be proud of the things they say
about how you spent YOUR dash?

Just remembered this poem and thought to myself that I think your Mum lived her 'dash' very well xxxxx

Mouseface · 01/12/2013 16:38

Thank you everyone for you kind words Thanks

BIWI - please don't apologise and thank you for telling me about your mum, there were lots of complications with mum, she had so many other 'illnesses' and health problems over the years, that in just a few short months, she'd started to become thinner, looked 'ill' more often than not. Have bad days where she would slur because of the MS and have horrid muscle cramps, I started to see a change in her, and I didn't like it. Not one bit.... bless you for posting xxx Thanks

Shabba - oh sweetheart, your post about your parents, particularly your poor dad, moved me to tears. I think living with the knowledge that you are going to lose a loved one and then waiting for them to go, is one of the cruelest things a person has to endure.

The not knowing 'when' must be torturous, not knowing if it will be the day you wake, the day you planned to meet a friend, to be somewhere, to continue your life because you have to, not knowing if when the phone rings it's going to be someone asking you to get there, I just can't imagine Shabba.

I think the fact that although I knew mum was seriously ill, at the start of November when I saw her before she passed away really shocked me. I was so scared and certain that she had cancer. She had this look about her that I can't explain.

Her face was different, salo, empty. It eats you up from the inside and takes so much from people, those with it and those watching their loved one.

I emailed my dad and told him how I felt. The opening line in his reply was 'She does NOT have cancer' Sad

Turns out, she did, and lots of it.

I had around 14 hours with her before she took her last breath in my arms. Holding her and caring her before she left felt so natural. I washed her faced for her with some wipes, the staff had bathed her and blow dried her hair which smelt so nice, I massaged her feet, legs and arms with E45 cream and my Auntie helped too.... I gave her mouth care, using wet sponges and helped her to sip water.

Just those few little, simple things helped me to deal with the situation, just as caring for Nemo when he was in PICU fighting for his life had years ago.

Shabba - do you know how long your dad has left? It must crush your heart to hear him say how scared he is of dying but I really do hope that by telling him that loved ones will be waiting for him, to guide him forward, and take the pain away, the fear, the sorrow that he must feel for 'letting you down/leaving you' is of some comfort to him.

I think because I had no real time to prepare myself fully, although I knew deep down that my mum would never leave that hospital bed alive, I just got on with it IYSWIM?

My dad had been going every day, she was admitted via A&E the Sunday before so had been in for a few days. I knew that but little else as "I've enough on my plate with my disability and caring for Nemo" so only ever got told half the story if any of it at all, plus the fact that we're no longer 10 minutes from my dad......

There's so much that I wanted to tell her before she left, out loud, but in a way I guess I did, I told her lots when I was waiting for the nurses to come, it was just us in the room then, but I wish I'd told her more often that I love her.

I wish I thanked her more for her continued love and support, even when she knew it would end in my tears, or I was not thinking straight, she'd support me, always. I always wrote it in cards, Mother's Day, birthdays etc....... and I'd tell her I loved her on the phone.

We're so alike though so maybe that's why at times we'd both wait for the other to call, almost a 'She knows where I am if she wants to talk to me' even though I could talk to her for hours.

The song 'Living Years' by Mike and The Mechanics was one of her all time favourites, the words made her cry. Both of her parents are still alive and saw her every week, without fail when they could.

I hope that they told her how much they loved her, how much she meant to them as their eldest daughter.

So, in three days, I am going to be saying 'Bye for now mum, I love you and know I'll see you some day, I promise. Please go and find the boys and look after them, they're waiting for you, (we lost triplets at 16wk gestation), so is Great Gran, Grandad, (her FIL) and all of those other wonderful people that we've lost along the way' to her.

In those moments, when it was just us in that room, I knew that the entire world would keep turning, people would be at work, children at school, some sleeping, others will be leaving this world too and others will be entering it.

I know that between now and Wednesday my life will go on, in a bubble almost.... I'll still be me, doing my jobs, pottering around to keep busy, planning what to where and sending my memories to the Humanist who is taking the service.

I've designed the 'booklet' (or whatever it's called) for people to have with a picture of my mum, dad and DD, mum's holding Nemo when he was just a few months old.

I'll change what I'm wearing so many times and then go back to my original choice.... DD's not coming so I want her to be okay, I think her friend is coming back from school with her, I just know that I have to keep busy.

Thank you all again for posting to me. I might be a bit wobbly between now and Wednesday so forgive me for waffling on and on....

Sorry for the epic post, again. Blush

I'll light a candle for you Shabba and for all of you who are losing someone you love, and for those of you who are remembering loved ones as you read this. Sorry for any typos.

Mouse xxx

OP posts:
Mouseface · 01/12/2013 16:48

Also, thank you for the poem Shabba xx

In the OP, I put that my DH came to get me on the Sunday, it was actually the Saturday. Sorry.

OP posts:
QOD · 01/12/2013 17:42

So sorry for your loss :(

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