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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Avi, I agree with M. I'm not one to give advice because I have not conquered those guilty feelings either. I have a feeling, and that is all I can go by, that one day we will grow tired of beating ourselves up, and that's when we will take a greater step towards healing. Our moms know very well how much we love them.
Avi, so good to hear that you can feel celebratory. Engaging in life is important, it is something every parent wants for their child. At the same time, I think in bereavement it’s hard to handle celebratory occasions because our emotions are so volatile and exacerbated. There may be moments of beauty, then a crash into feelings of pointlessness, absurdity, resentment, whatever. That’s why I didn’t want to be bothered with my birthday this year, so close to my mother’s death, I just felt I couldn’t maintain composure and still get any joy from the experience. And I’m tired of people tolerating my tears and sorrow, especially family members who just don’t share my feelings of loss. In the end I was forced to do it and it was okay, but not joyful for me. Ideally I think it’s better when you can decide what kind of events and celebrations are right for you, have some control ... but that’s not always workable. Hope your little girl is brightening your days in this new year.
Hi All,
Just returned from a small trip in India only. Whenever I celebrate, I feel guilty.
I never thought that your mom wasn't tidy. When my mom got really sick, her ways didn't change. She would say, "How does the kitchen look?" I would tell her that it was fine, but she would say, "Get in there and clean it up." Even if it was clean I would make cleaning noises to appease her. Mom got a rumba vacuum cleaner because she couldn't vacuum every day anymore. It was adorable. Mom didn't understand modern technology. She would talk to it. After it made several passes in one room, mom would say to it, "Go on and get my room now." When the it ignored her she would say, "Now, you listen to me!! Git!!"
Just to be clear, my mother also liked things kept tidy and despite her health issues made the bed every day, though not necessarily first thing. I definitely didn’t mean to suggest that we got into an unmade bed to watch afternoon tv — she would not like that imputation at all!
To my surprise, my determinedly undomesticated father has been making the bed every morning since my mother’s death. He did occasionally help her change the bed and so on, but I never had the impression that he cared about beds being made. Obviously he does now.
Brett, my mom did the same she made her bed every day, and the day before she went to the hospital in the ambulance, I got to her house and her bed was made....
I do the same...
I never really outgrew laying down next to my mom. She outgrew it for me. Mom was real fussy about her bed. Her mom was, too. Mom would make up her bed all the way through her sickness. I don't know how she did it but she did. There came a point when I would lat down next to my mom out of necessity and she was too sick to argue. I needed to be there in case she needed me. Mom was never a mushy person, but she relented in the end. She would let me hold her hand. I guess she knew that time was running out and that I needed that.
Brett, you brought back a memory — for some reason I never became grownup enough to not lie down in the big bed with my mom. In the last few years we would go in there, close the door, get under the covers, and watch an old movie on the barely functioning bedroom tv whenever my father took an impromptu nap in the den, where the “good” television is. It was often more hanging out and talking, putting on hand cream, etc., than serious movie watching. When my father would eventually wake up he would always throw the door open dramatically and express some degree of outrage at our sneaking off.
Just seems like the world is a cold place without my mom. It's the same world it always was, but I view it differently now. I imagine that I always will. There is never a good time to lose your mom, but I sure wish that she was still here with me, healthy.
It's ok Brett...having a good time with your friends and then feeling guilty afterwards. You are still grieving.
It is important not to dismiss, deny, belittle or escape our grief. Don't rush through it. Deal with it head-on...it is painful, I know.
I too wish, I could do a time travel...back to the past. Happy days. Happy family. And my beautiful mum.
Right now, I can only relieve that golden era.
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