My mom's health has been declining for sometime now with lung disease. I'm thinking she may have 6 months or a year left, maybe, I mean God only knows, I'm just wondering if anyone else has worried a lot on how to deal with missing them and grief afterward? I'm just close with my mom, and lived together last ten years also so I wonder if I should get a new home or feel closer to her staying in same place? So odd how so many issues come to mind when you "try" to prepare yourself for a death of a close loved one. Thanks and God bless.
Your profile says that she has dementia. Are you caring for her in her home? Do you have help?
I am so sorry to hear about your mom's condition. I have to agree with meallen, I don't think any of us can ever really prepare for that final moment when our parent's pass. I know I was in denial myself. I never thought my dad would die. Even before his decline we had bought a burial plot, prepared a will and I had handled some other paperwork for him. When he had a stroke, I still thought I could fix him and he would get better and return to his old life. He suffered another heart attack and the doctor told me he had 6 months but he ended up passing 3 days later. It was the worst day of my life. I didn't know how raw I would be, I just didn't. It wasn't real till that moment the doctor told me and I still didn't want to believe it.
One year after his passing, I am struggling the decision to keep the house or buy a new home and start over. Quite honestly most days I don't feel like doing much, so maybe I need more time to make that decision.
I hope you will cherish this time with your mom. And do what you can for her. And maybe try to settle some of the details, but in the end, I really feel there is no preparation for that moment.
You're jumping in to a set of unknowns in the future and most are out of your control. At this moment you can't estimate how you will feel once she passes.
Some issues you do have some control over is what others have said - talk with her now of her wishes for her burial, and does she wish for a service, and what kind?
- if I could suggest attempting to write her obituary or at least notes to go from, now--
- if you are in charge of paperwork, as in the necessary places that will need contact after like banks, pensions etc
HARSH, yes but it may help for your peace of mind afterward-- not searching for papers, or being upset while you have to review her life on paper for the notice.
For now, I found that this time is for sharing your love for them, with them. The time for laughing about the old stories. Playing her favourite music for her. Contacting her friends for a phone call or an actual visit. Asking and telling her everything you can... have found no matter how much time I had with my Mom, the week after her death I have so many questions. We spent so much time together over many years and I've found since her passing I still have questions I know will be forever unanswered. Stuff like which Aunt in England sent her those beautiful doilies decades ago? What was her parents' favourite saying?
I'm sorry your Mom also has dementia... I guess its what questions she'll still have answers to...
Its so hard. So very, very hard.
For me, knowing that this life is but a brief (but important!) period of time in our eternal existence, knowing that my loved ones who have passed are still existing, on another plane..this all brings me a great deal of comfort. My daddy passed 13 years ago, and I often feel his presence when I am down or sad. Also my grandmother, who has been gone over 25 years.
Mother isn't doing well. She has a cold right now, but a cold for her almost always turns into pneumonia, and driving home from her place the other day, I had the overwhelming feeling that we aren't going to have her around a lot longer. She is simply wearing out. I'm grateful she has pre-planed everything, so when she goes, it should be easy on us kids. I really appreciate that!
I guess, because of my faith, I don't stress out about these things. I'm trying to just embrace the time I have with mother, still sad because we have not had a great relationship and she's got too much dementia to really have any kind of in depth conversation.
I'm sorry for what you are going through. A lot of us are in the same boat....mixed feelings, wanting our LO to have a quality of life, but knowing they are tired and really probably want to "move on".
My mom just went from her AL to the ER and they refused to keep her for the requisite three days in the hospital but referred her back to skilled nursing. This means that Medicare will not pay; we have to pay $9,000/mo. Out of pocket.
My husband is MISERABLE in his skin and in his mind. He cannot regulate his body temperature, feels like he is freezing, wears four layers of clothes, sweats through it all--and spends all night trying to "dry" his four layers. The night before last he got up and started a fire in the wood stove that was ROARING and shut the door to the room. It was like a Navajo sweat lodge. Frightening!!!!!!!!! He thought this would dry the clothes on his body. Every night I have to redress him in the middle of the night. Last night he went down the stairs in the pitch dark--and he tells me he feels unsteady on his feet.
So, put all these facts together and what have you got? A fresh hell every day and very expensive. How much longer?
Am I proud of the way I am feeling? No. I love them both but neither of them is really enjoying life. Both of them are scaring me to death. In truth, I lost them long ago to this disease. So, losing them to death does not feel as painful as it would have done years ago.
So, yes, pre-death anxiety.