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My mum died on Saturday

75 replies

MrsArchieTheInventor · 10/03/2008 12:34

I don't want to talk about it as such, just want to write. I'm sorry if it's all a load of bollocks.

She had secondary breast cancer of the liver. She was diagnosed on 1st February after a month of abdominal pain and loss of appetite. At Christmas she thought she'd just put on weight and eaten too much but she went to her doctor in the middle of January and the nurse practitioner referred her for an immediate liver and abdominal scan, which showed that she had several tumours in her liver and that her liver was occupying almost all of her abdominal cavity, thus crushing the rest of the vital organs in there and causing her pain. She was started on chemotherapy on 7th February with three weeks of taking the drugs and one week off. On Thursday she went for a check up at the hospital with my sister and sis phoned in the afternoon to say that she'd been kept in as she'd deteriorated so much since she was first diagnosed. I was at work when sis phoned and to be honest what she was saying went in one ear and out the other. All I heard were the words 'hospice', 'morphine' and 'Macmillan nurse'. DS, DP and I drove down on Friday afternoon and we went straight to the hospital. As soon as mum saw DS her face lit up, even if he was hesitant to touch her to start with as she looked very poorly. She was saying things she wouldn't normally say, things about the other women in the ward that she wouldn't normally have said, but I guess she just didn't care by that stage. We left her on Friday night very tired and obviously very poorly but she was still the same mum. My last words to her were 'I love you'.

We stayed in a hotel on Friday night and on Saturday morning I got a call on my mobile from the hospital. When the nurse first said she was calling from Barnes ward I expected her to say that mum had taken a turn for the worst and to come now or that she'd been taken to the intensive care unit. When she said that mum had passed away I didn't believe it. I was certain they'd got the wrong woman, that they'd mistaken my mum for someone else. I phoned sis and through the hysterical tears somehow managed to tell her that mum had died. Sis, her partner and I drove to the hospital, breaking several speed limits along the way. It was 7.30am and the roads were quiet.

Nothing can prepare you for how someone looks when they're dead. Mum was already turning yellow through her condition. The bedsheet was pulled up to her neck and she had a pink tulip on her pillow from the bunch that DS took for her the previous night. She was an awful purple and yellow colour, stiff, cold, clammy and just not mum. Her ears were deep purple and her cheeks were turning purple. Her lips were dark and sunken into her mouth like she disapproved of something. Sis stroked her head and I held her hand, neither of us quite believing that it had happened so quickly. We were in no doubt that mum's condition was a 'when', not an 'if', we just didn't expect it to be so quickly. When the nurse phoned to tell me she'd died I asked what had happened and the nurse said that mum had been a bit unwell in the night and when she'd gone to check on mum at 7am she found her unresponsive and started CPR, and it was decided 10 minutes later that there was nothing more they could do. Sis asked the same nurse at the hospital what she meant by mum being unwell. The nurse said that mum had gotten up to go to the toilet at about 6am and fallen, but they weren't sure if she'd fainted or tripped, but that they put her back to bed and given her some pain relief.

We're all taking comfort from the fact that mum died peacefully in her sleep, though I've got questions going round in my head asking why the nurse didn't call us when mum fell at 6am, and how someone can be up and about at 6am and dead an hour later. The berevement service at the hospital are getting the nurse on duty to phone me and hopefully answer the questions going round in my head. Mum's passing was inevitable, and she was very very ill, though I guess I didn't realise just how ill she was. Sis and I both wanted to be with her when she died, although mum has talked on several occasions about death, saying that it's an inevitability that comes to us all and that it's something we have to do alone, even if we're surrounded by our loved ones. No one can come back and tell you what it's like, what to do, what to say.

I read in the news this morning about that horrific car crash in Gloucester over the weekend and also the girl who was murdered in Goa and I think to myself that at least we got to say goodbye to mum, whereas the loved ones of some people who died over the weekend didn't get even that, coupled with knowing that they died a violent death. That's horrific and my heart goes out to people to whom that has happened.

There's a poem I want to be included on the Order of Service at mum's funeral. It's called Death Is Nothing At All, by Canon Henry Scott-Holland. It was included on my grandad's Order of Service when we buried him 14 years ago and I think it was the way mum viewed death.

Death is nothing at all
I have only slipped away into the next room
I am I and you are you
Whatever we were to each other
That we are still
Call me by my old familiar name
Speak to me in the easy way you always used
Put no difference into your tone
Wear no forced air of solemnity or sorrow
Laugh as we always laughed
At the little jokes we always enjoyed together
Play, smile, think of me, pray for me
Let my name be ever the household word that it always was
Let it be spoken without effort
Without the ghost of a shadow in it
Life means all that it ever meant
It is the same as it ever was
There is absolute unbroken continuity
Why should I be out of mind
Because I am out of sight?
I am waiting for you for an interval
Somewhere very near
Just around the corner
All is well.

OP posts:
dustystar · 10/03/2008 12:48

I'm so sorry for your loss I've always loved that poem - beautiful words

Niecie · 10/03/2008 12:48

So sorry for your loss.

TheFallenMadonna · 10/03/2008 12:52

Take care.

serenity · 10/03/2008 12:53

I am really sorry to hear this MrsArchie - my sympathies and thoughts are with you and yours

imaginaryfriend · 10/03/2008 12:54
Sad
OrmIrian · 10/03/2008 12:54

So sorry

WendyWeber · 10/03/2008 12:54

How lucky that you did have time to say goodbye, MrsA, and that your last words to her were so perfect.

I'm very sorry for your loss and wish you strength to get through the next few weeks

Kindersurpise · 10/03/2008 12:57

So sorry for your loss.

WiiMii · 10/03/2008 12:59

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Message withdrawn at poster's request.

OrmIrian · 10/03/2008 13:02

I hope this doesn't sound too horrible, but it might help. My mum was with her mother when she died. We were all in the house and my mum and dad went upstairs to get her to the toilet. She actually has her final heart attack while she was there. It was awful to see but the doctor said that she must have been unconcious and died almost straight away so it was worse for my mum and dad than for gran. Perhaps it was better for your mum (and for you) that your last contact was peaceful and loving.

WowOoo · 10/03/2008 13:04

Sorry. Amazed when I read how you had the focus to write so much, so clearly. You have chosen a beautiful poem. x

egypt · 10/03/2008 13:06

I am thinking of you , have never met you but will you'll be in my thoughts for sometime

so sorry

harpsichordcarrier · 10/03/2008 13:08

I am very sorry for your loss too.
sending love, HC xx

MrsArchieTheInventor · 10/03/2008 13:14

Thank you all for your kind words.

I told DS on Saturday morning and but he's obviously too young to understand what's happened. He got a bit sad yesterday afternoon when he asked if it meant he wouldn't be able to see grandma again, and I said you'll be able to see grandma whenever you like, all you have to do is close your eyes and think of her, and I told him to close his eyes and think of mum and I asked him what they were doing, whether they were having a bath or baking a cake or reading a story, and DS said they were baking cakes and he had a smile on his face when he told me what they were doing. That's how I want it to be. Everyone's devastated that mum's died but I'd like people to celebrate her life and I know mum would too.

When I saw her body on Saturday I thought it looked like a diseased shell and nothing at all like mum. I'd like to think that her spirit, the essence that made mum mum, is still here, alive and well. The body in the mortuary isn't her. I feel so disrespectful thinking that but I can't help the way I feel. It's not mum there, it's a diseased shell.

OP posts:
littlelapin · 10/03/2008 13:16

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NAB3wishesfor2008 · 10/03/2008 13:17

I am so very sorry for your loss and want to applaud you for your informative post. I think it will help a lot of people and also take away a bit of the fear of death, as well as being honest about what happens afterwards.

I wish you peace at this sad time.

My Nan died almost 3 years ago from secondary cancer and I last spoke to her two days before she died. I never believed it would be the last phone call we would have.

RnB · 10/03/2008 13:24

Message withdrawn

ajandjjmum · 10/03/2008 13:25

So sorry Mrs. Archie.

When my bro and I saw Dad just after he had died, my bro felt really strongly that 'Dad' was somewhere else, it was just his shell we were looking at.

The Vicar told us that often people die when their loved ones have 'popped out of the room', so we tried not to feel bad about not being there.

How lucky are those of us who have parents that generated so much love.

AdamAnt · 10/03/2008 13:30

Oh Archie. I'm so sorry. You chose a beautiful poem.

chocolateteapot · 10/03/2008 13:32

So sorry MrsArchie

themildmanneredjanitor · 10/03/2008 13:34

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brimfull · 10/03/2008 13:37

how heartbreaking archie

At least you mum didn't suffer for long.

That's a beautiful poem.

EiWishFor3MoreWishes · 10/03/2008 13:38

im so sorry this has happened mrsarchie that poem is just beautiful we came very close to this situation with my mum she had stage 3/4 breast cancer and had a very long and hard fight. thankfully she made it through but i still feel frightened about how close we came to losing her i cant even comprehend how you are feeling it seems as if your mum was/is much loved by you and all of your family xx {{{{{{{{hugs}}}}}}}}}}
xx ei xx

janestillhere · 10/03/2008 13:41

I think you're doing everything brilliantly. You made me feel warm inside describing ds's memories of baking with his eyes shut.
Love to you and yours at this awful time love.
Also, when I saw my brother in the chapel of rest when he died 14 yrs ago, I truly felt he wasn't there. His body looked abit like him - yet I distinctly felt he wasn't THERE anymore. xxxx free of pain at last x

jezzemx · 10/03/2008 13:45

Mrs. Archie. I'm so sorry for your loss and I am sending lots of love and hugs to you and your family. x