Don't grieve alone; 14,000 members and growing
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Kate,
I'm sorry for the loss of your mom. my mom died January 10, 2011. I miss her so much. I think about her often, and I am deeply hurt by her passing. I know my mom would want me to go on and be happy, and I'm sure your mom would want you to be happy. Letting go is the hardest part for me. I have to remember to take it one day at a time.
Kate,
I'm so sorry for the loss of your mom, I to loss my mom who was my best friend. It is something you don't get over you just get through it and learn to live with it. I can tell you from experience it does get better, I thought I would never feel joy again and I did. There is no time line on grief, it is different for everyone.
You can not change anything that has already happened, worring about it will not change it. Something that comforted me and brought me back to reality was a scripture from the bible Isaiah43:18-19 The Lord said, "Do not remember the former things, nor consider the things of old, behold I will do a new thing. Now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?" Learning from the past is useful. Dwelling on the past is destructive. I'm sure your mom wants you to take care of your family and live a happy and joyful life. You took care of her until the end but now you need to take care of yourself. Another thing that might help you is keeping a journal, it helped me tremendously. And prayer! I hope this helps you,
I will keep you in my prayers
God Bless,
Denise
Hi Kate,
In reading your post, what stands out to me is the guilt you're feeling for not being diligent in looking into a liver transplant and not being more effective in changing your mother's life.
Although I obviously don't know the medical circumstances of your mother's life, none of the patients I served in hospice with hep c or other liver diseases were able to qualify for a transplant. By the time the disease was discovered and with the huge backlog of potential recipients who were otherwise healthy, they were never even were placed on the transplant list. Although I'm not a physician, I think your mother's alcoholism would have disqualified her for a transplant.
As for the guilt you feel about not being more effective in getting your mother to change. Change, whether it involves something a simple as procrastination or as difficult as alcoholism isn't possible unless the person is willing to change. Often, despite the protestations from those they love and don't want to hurt, there are just too many forces holding them back.
It's a natural reaction saying to oneself, "If only I ....." A very wise Buddhist monk once said to me, "we do the best we can given the circumstances of our lives." I've found "If only" statements rarely do anything for someone other than make them feel guilty about events they most likely had no control over. I hope this helps,
Take Care,
Stan
Hi Dana,
My experience has been that there comes a time when those who grieve need to make a decision: to remain within their grief, or look for ways of ending it.
Unfortunately, many approaches talk about waiting until it just loses it's intensity. I've never seen that work with the family members of those I've served in hospice nor with private clients. What I found is that most people who either transformed their grief, got through it, or replaced it with a joy they thought would never reappear, was to look for the emotion(s) that disappeared when their loved one died. For some, it did mean a literal replacement (e.g., a new husband), but for most the lost emotion was replaced by different relationships or activities (e.g., a husband who lost his wife who made him feel needed, became a volunteer for a homeless shelter). Identifying the emotions is the first step. The next is identifying where it might occur. Hope this helps.
Take Care,
Stan
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