Don't grieve alone; 14,000 members and growing
Started by silvia maria. Last reply by silvia maria Aug 5, 2022.
Started by dream moon JO B Aug 13, 2021.
Started by Lucinda. Last reply by dream moon JO B Apr 19, 2021.
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Virginia, I feel that way as well. I don't want to be in this world without my mom. And I'll be honest with you. I got more out of medication than I did therapy. The heartbreak we experience can start with sadness and become full blown Major Depressive Disorder. It's good to fight that on two fronts. My therapist could not prescribe medication so she referred me to a psychiatrist. She has been a lot of help, or the medication has. And also just time. It's still very early for you. I think for the first few months after my mom died I was walking around in a state of shock. I have a really good memory but there is a lot about those days that I cannot even remember. And then there was a point where I woke up and the reality of the situation sank in. That was rough, and I still am experiencing that. I'm not saying this to scare you. I just want you to know that what you're feeling is natural grief.
It's hard for you and me. I completely understand your relationship with your mom because I lived something very similar. I never got married. I wanted to stay with my mom. I used to say that there was nothing that could pry me away from my mom. I was wrong. Death did. It's so hard to go from one extreme to another. To go from having our moms each day to not having her at all. That's a hard thing to fathom and accept.
Just please don't give up. Find joy where you can. I never liked it when people told me this but it's true. Our mom's would want us to be happy. How we get there is the mystery. I'll fight with you my friend. We'll figure this out together.
Thank you Bluebell, I go to my therapist every week. I have to be able to run all my thoughts by her, especially about the guilt. The good thing is she has known me for a long time and has even met my Mom so she knows our unusually close relationship. People ask if it helps but nothing can take the pain or loss away. I don’t want to be in this world without her.
I think you said you have a good therapist too. I am glad your grief has lessened.
I tried several medications for my PTSD. It took a a while to find the right one. You have to let that kind of medication build up in your system before you know if it will truly work, but sometimes the side effects in the early stages are just too much. It's hit or miss until you find the right fit. Some folks are lucky and they find the right medication right away.
With PTSD it is so important to remember that we tend to feel things harder than others. We can take a bad situation and believe it to be so much worse than it actually is. That's when we have to realize that it's the PTSD talking. Medication can help greatly, so can therapy, but there comes a point when you just become tired of being scared and you start to fight back and not let it control your emotions. It's not easy. None of this is easy. There is no proper way to grieve. We feel what we feel. People tell me that I have made progress over the last two and a half years. I think that may be more apparent to them than it is me. I still miss my mom terribly. I cry a lot. I am nowhere near a finished product. I just believe that we have to take baby steps, inch by inch, day by day, minute by minute. Missing our moms is one thing, but wondering if they know how much we love them is needless. They know. And as far as guilt is concerned, I don't think there is even one of our moms who would come back and yell at us. If anything, they would hold us like when we were small children and tell us that everything is going to be okay. They love us as much as we love them, and that is saying something.
Beautiful Brett and so very honest and true.
Bluebell
You also Bluebell, thank you.....
Hi Theresa. I am up too and have been since 3AM. No point in going to bed now. I am going to start the coffee and carry on with my day. I hope yours goes well.
Hugs
Bluebell
Virginia, Bluebell is correct, it has been two years and four months and I still cry.
Three months is a short time, for me the first year was just a blur, I can't remember much or how I got things done.
Virginia I feel like an only child being my brother is 17 years older than me and lives far away, we talk very infrequently, I have no children, just my 11 year old labrador.
I volunteer at church on Fridays before work to sit in peace with the blessed sacrament, I feel like it gives me clarification and a sense of peace.
I do have to say not one day goes by without me almost crying I try hard to get it together, but I can only try so hard.
My mom was very independent also, she drove, went to church and did more than I did at 92 years old. Her passing was not only a shock to me but to everyone she knew, it was so sudden and unexpected.
Only in my opinion if you are taking care of your mom if she is ill, you have time to say mom I love you, I did not get to say anything.
After her passing it was amazing how many peoples lives she touched.
If I could have one wish it would be just to say mom I love you with all my heart
Virginia
3 months is a very short time. It has been a little more than a year for me and the intensity of my grief has gotten less, but it is and may never be gone. I will always miss her. Be kind to yourself and do not set a time line on how you should be feeling. I suggest you take it a day at a time or even minute by minute and hang on to the thought that it will get better. Mean time, let yourself feel what ever emotion it is that comes along and try to distract yourself if it becomes too intense. If you have a good therapist that you trust and feel safe with, stick with him or her for support. But no therapist's words are gospel, because they are human too and make mistakes.
Thank you for asking about the withdrawal from the antidepressant. It has its ups and downs. Today was a bad day in someways but good in that I found something called Sea Band that actually helps the dizziness and nausea. It is based on acupressure.
My thoughts and prayers are with you. You can get through this.
Bluebell
Brett,
can I just ask, were you ever given medicine for your ptsd? Do or did you ever feel like you didn’t fully realize what happened? And other times it would be clearer? I feel like I’m not grieving appropriately. Honestly, I thought I would have dropped dead instantly when this happened and don’t know what I’m still doing here. I don’t belong here without her.
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