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I am so sorry. I know this is hard on you. You want to give all your love but you are weary and tired.

Pray is the best thing for you and your dad.

May God give you the strength and comfort you need.
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I am so sorry for the pain you are currently suffering. I sat with my father in hospice and lost him September 27. All I could do was sit by his bedside and quietly read, tell him I would take care of my mother (she has Alzheimer’s) and that it was okay for him to go. I prayed, played his playlist from his cellphone, and knew he could hear me even though he was non-responsive. It was the most painful thing I’ve ever gone through in my life. But it gives you the chance to speak to them of your feelings for them so you leave nothing on the table. You almost have to look at that time as a gift for the two of you. Now that he has passed and reality has set in it’s a time of doing not just sitting and waiting. This is a different kind of pain. My prayers go out to you for healing and strength. People will tell you your father is in a better place but that doesn’t help you in the place you are right now. It’s a lonely, cold, scary time. Take care of you and let time pass. Cry, talk to your dad’s spirit, feel every emotion you need to. This is for you now.
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Marykk Nov 2020
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Get a appointment with the Chaplain. He knows how to help you.
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No answers. Just prayers, hugs and understanding.
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OP Annlat lost her Dad some days ago, readers. Scroll down to her lovely message. She was able to be with him to the end and is very comforted by that.
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Llamalover47 Nov 2020
AlvaDeer: Thank you for pointing that out.
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Annlat: I am so sorry for your loss and send deepest condolences to you.
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I feel for you so much. It seems you might have experienced this role many times as a healthcare worker, only this time you're the daughter too. I know you're not looking for advice, but I hope you don't mind me suggesting this--are there any family or friends, even caregivers who can help sit in and give you a break to enable you to spend these last lucid times with your father as a daughter, rather than caregiver?
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My mother-in-law fell in May of 2008, and banged her head so badly that she didn't recognize anyone except her son and daughter. Although she had lived with us for 3 years before she fell, she didn't recognize me but always smiled when I told her when she got as good as she was going to get, I would take her home with me. When my MIL was admitted for her last hospitalization and they said she was going to pass, hubby and SIL said to put her in the nursing home because she didn't know we were there. Knowing they were not going to sit by her beside, and not being able to stand the thought of her being by herself, I insisted we bring her back home. My SIL, hubby and I took visited with her during the day and took turns turning her at night. SIL turned her at 10 (after we went to bed), hubby got up at MN and turned her, and I got up at 3 and turned her before I started work. She passed between MN and 3 so we knew it was her choice. Hubby and SIL were both thankful I was so insistent on bring her home.

My Dad went into hospice 2 months before he passed. He and Mom always said they preferred to have visitors while they were living rather than at their funeral, so the children and grandchildren to see him right away. When he was put on the eminent status on the Thursday before he passed, my brother was on a job site and felt he could not leave. He said if Daddy died before he got there, then it was God's will, and that he (brother) would be at peace with that. My sister and I took turns sitting with him through the night, by his bed, holding his hand. When she was there, I slept on the couch in the same room. When I was there, she felt better going to her own home (20 minutes away) to rest. My brother arrived on Saturday, and I was so very thankful. Saturday night I thanked Daddy for waiting until my bother got there and it was OK if he "went home." Sunday morning the chaplain came and said he was suprised Daddy had hung on that long. My brother's wife suggested that maybe we should call my other sister (who had come to visit a few months before and knew she could't afford to come back). That sister's husband was a policeman who was killed in the line of duty and preferred to not be close when Daddy passed. Anyway, we called my sister, put her on speaker, and she said "I love you Daddy" and within 45 minutes he was gone. I had thought Daddy was waiting for my brother to come home, but I think he was waiting on my sister to call too. Mom, my brother and his family, sister and her husband, my husband and I were all present (in the house) when daddy passed. Several of us were by his bed when he took his last breath, and we knew that was the way he wanted to go (in contrast to my MIL who preferred to die without an audience).

Now my mom lives with us and has been in hospice for 6 weeks, but she has improved remarkably in the last 3 weeks. Her short-term memory is gone, she sundowns and gets agitated, but physically she is much better. I wouldn't be surprised if at the end of her initial certification period they do not recertify her - and that will be OK. I appreciate all the help Hospice has provided (used the same agency with Daddy 2 years ago and some of the people are still there). I fully expect my mom will want as many of us possible around her when she leaves this world.

That being said, if our loved one passes when we are not present, rest assured it was probably their choice, and they were not truly alone, that the angels were surrounding them to keep them company.

I'm sorry for your loss. Praying for you.
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