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Bereavement

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My beautiful son

999 replies

minmooch · 26/02/2014 17:13

After nearly two and a half years of a fight with cancer my beautiful 18 year old son passed away this morning at 11:20 am.

I am humbled by his strength and humour that he has shown throughout his short life.

OP posts:
1234hello · 22/02/2017 20:44

How are you minmooch?

I do genuinely care. Sorry if my words have been clumsy or insensitive.

[Flowers]

QueenofPentacles · 22/02/2017 22:08

That is so sad and I send you and your family much love x

minmooch · 23/02/2017 17:39

1234hello. Thank you for your words and thoughts. They are not clumsy at all.

I think I'm at the lowest point since my son died. During his illness I carried on because I had to get him through it. The first year after his death I was still in shock and numb to much of it. The second year after his death was spent trying to pretend everything was ok. I did everything, went everywhere.

This third year is when reality hits hard. My son suffered so much and then he died. Nothing can change that. I have and still do try to make my life worthwhile, happy etc. It's just so exhausting. All. The. Time. It's a heavy weight to carry. And it's not as simple as letting it go. I want to remember every moment of my son's life but there is so much suffering to remember. Of course I remember his strength, humour, dignity but it's hard to find acceptance/balance when he died anyway.

Every day life is hard. When you are surrounded by people who have not experienced the loss of a child. Their lives continue as is right. My life is stuck. Although those words don't really explain it. Other people are able to plan their lives with excitement. My ability to plan ahead is there but there is so much exhaustion that at times it's easier not to plan. The futures is marred by what should have been. I know most people's futures don't go as planned or expected but the death of a child is a cruelty. It's torture at times. It's just so bloody sad. And the sadness is and always will be there.

I know I will survive. I will continue for my other son. I hope that there is happiness and light to come to me in my future. It's just hard to see it right now.

It has only been three years. It is such a long time and such a short time.

I still wake with a shock at times. I still find it hard to believe my child got cancer and died. I'm not sure how you come to terms with that? Maybe some people do. I still rail against the cruelty of his disease and what it robbed him of. What it robbed all of us of.

I simply love him and miss him. Every. Single. Moment.

His anniversary is Sunday. The pressure before these significant dates builds. Then recedes afterwards. But I know I will go through it again on his birthday, Christmas, Mother's Day, Easter, his next anniversary.

I love him and miss him. My boy. My precious, precious boy.

OP posts:
endofthelinefinally · 23/02/2017 17:42

Oh minmooch. I know.
Sending you love Flowers

wherethewildthingis · 23/02/2017 17:47

I'm so sorry . You wrote about him so beautifully when he was alive. We are all just strangers here but I still think of your brave, funny and clever boy and I am sure others do to. I cannot imagine what you are enduring and I know there will be no words of comfort. Just sending a virtual hug across cyberspace x

magimedi · 23/02/2017 17:53

Still here, still the stranger who thinks of you, Will & your other boy and your two girls. Often. Looking west & sending you love.

Bluebell66 · 23/02/2017 17:54

Minmooch - I just had to send you a message. I've read your last post with tears rolling down my face. I lost my husband to lung cancer 3 years ago, and I too have found this third year the hardest. I relate totally to everything you've said about the numbness and then the coping. In the third year I completely fell apart. I started bereavement Counselling with CRUSE just before Christmas and I do feel it's helping a little. My son and daughter have been my reasons for getting up in the morning, they have saved me. The thought of losing one of them is unimaginable. My heart breaks for you. I know I will carry a deep, deep sadness in my heart for the rest of my life, but I know for the sake of my children I somehow have to find the strength to go on. I know you will too for the sake of your other son. Grief is a very long, lonely road with no ending.

Sending you all my love, hugs and strength xx

1234hello · 23/02/2017 22:20

What you have written minmooch is very moving and makes a lot of sense. I think what you are feeling and how you describe it is very understandable. Though that is not to take away from how immensely painful and sad it is.

Sending you more love, hugs and strength x

1234hello · 23/02/2017 22:24

Have you read the How has grief changed you thread minmooch? I have found it helpful and used the same phrase as you in my comment there - a heavy weight to carry round at all times. It's crap Sad

OpalIridescence · 23/02/2017 22:42

Minmooch I read your threads when Will was still fighting and your family shone out to me then and still does now.
I don't really know words for this, suppose because there are no words that make it better and we always want to make it better.
I just needed to say that we are total strangers but I think of you and Will regularly, because your words are beautiful and your love so obvious.
Thank you for showing the photos, he is gorgeous.

minmooch · 24/02/2017 12:50

Thank you all for your lovely words.

I'm lacking words today - got to hold myself together at work.

But just to say I miss my Will. My funny, loving, gentle, awesome, daft, strong, gentle giant of a child. I miss him looming over me - he was over 6ft tall. I miss his voice calling me. The 'missing' is big today.

OP posts:
LilyTheSavage · 24/02/2017 21:26

Dearest minmooch
Just wanted to say that I'm thinking of you and holding you close in my heart. You and your darling Will. I will light a candle on Sunday and say his name.

The missing is hard. The weight of sorrow and loss is a heavy burden.

Sending so much love.

ineedwine99 · 24/02/2017 21:28

So so sorry for your loss Flowers

minmooch · 25/02/2017 19:36

My darling boy. On the night before your third anniversary of your death. In a strange twist of fate I met today in the pub the paramedic who took us to A&E on your last trip there. I don't remember him but he remembers you/me. I went there for distraction, to watch the rugby that you and I used to love to watch together. I was hiding from all who knew you yet still I managed to meet someone who's life you affected. He remembered your smile, your humour, the tragedy of a life about to be lost so young.

I love you. With every beat of my heart. With every breath I take. You are my past, my present, my future. You are not here, yet you are here. I love you. Always.

OP posts:
Abraiid2 · 25/02/2017 19:39

You are in my thoughts, minmooch.

You aren't alone. I am glad you post here and we can share this with you. Even if we can't take away the pain.

Abraiid2 · 25/02/2017 19:40

Just as an aside, I was thinking earlier this week that I had never met a lad called Will that I didn't like. My children have known quite a few over the years and they have all, in different ways, been lovely.

OpalIridescence · 25/02/2017 21:03

Agree with you abraiid, lovely name.

Minmooch I will think of you and Will tomorrow.

So sorry you have to bear this

magimedi · 25/02/2017 23:10

Will will live forever in the minds of so many (the paramedic for example).

Will will always be there for you, he will never go away.

I will go to the sea tomorrow & have a silent moment for you, yours & above all, Will.

Love from that random on the internet .............. (((xxx)))

1234hello · 26/02/2017 08:17

Thinking of you and your family minmooch xxx

OpalIridescence · 26/02/2017 08:35

In my thoughts today Minmooch xxx

Badders123 · 26/02/2017 08:43

Darling min
I am thinking of you and dear Will today.
Love to you x

Ohb0llocks · 26/02/2017 08:45

Thinking of you today ❤

pinkhousesarebest · 27/02/2017 21:52

Thinking of you today dear Min

SerendipityDooDah · 28/02/2017 13:35

Min, your last post reminded me of this. It made the rounds on the internet when someone posted on reddit asking what to do following the loss of a loved one. Your waves are still coming hard and fast, it seems, and I'm so sorry. You are doing everything right, and yet these waves of grief still wipe you out. I hope, though, that this man's words come true for you -- that your waves start to come further apart, and with less utter devastation. Thinking of you and Will.

As for grief, you'll find it comes in waves. When the ship is first wrecked, you're drowning, with wreckage all around you. Everything floating around you reminds you of the beauty and the magnificence of the ship that was, and is no more. And all you can do is float. You find some piece of the wreckage and you hang on for a while. Maybe it's some physical thing. Maybe it's a happy memory or a photograph. Maybe it's a person who is also floating. For a while, all you can do is float. Stay alive.

In the beginning, the waves are 100 feet tall and crash over you without mercy. They come 10 seconds apart and don't even give you time to catch your breath. All you can do is hang on and float. After a while, maybe weeks, maybe months, you'll find the waves are still 100 feet tall, but they come further apart. When they come, they still crash all over you and wipe you out. But in between, you can breathe, you can function. You never know what's going to trigger the grief. It might be a song, a picture, a street intersection, the smell of a cup of coffee. It can be just about anything...and the wave comes crashing. But in between waves, there is life.

Somewhere down the line, and it's different for everybody, you find that the waves are only 80 feet tall. Or 50 feet tall. And while they still come, they come further apart. You can see them coming. An anniversary, a birthday, or Christmas, or landing at O'Hare. You can see it coming, for the most part, and prepare yourself. And when it washes over you, you know that somehow you will, again, come out the other side. Soaking wet, sputtering, still hanging on to some tiny piece of the wreckage, but you'll come out. Take it from an old guy. The waves never stop coming, and somehow you don't really want them to. But you learn that you'll survive them. And other waves will come. And you'll survive them too. If you're lucky, you'll have lots of scars from lots of loves. And lots of shipwrecks.

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