Don't grieve alone; 14,000 members and growing
I can't even wrap my mind around the fact that my mother is dead. It's been 2 weeks, and I get these twinges of grief. And the constant anxiety. But I think my father thinks I'm heartless because I just keep going through the motions.
She left such a huge void when she passed. We had no warning, no signals, no time to prepare. Our entire world was turned upside down. Now what? I can't grieve the way he is, I have to keep everything together for my kids and for him. He'll only eat if I cook the food, to be polite. Otherwise he'd probably starve.
I just want to curl up in bed and cry, but I can't. Get back to 9 to 5 (from home now), get the kitchen cleaned so I can use it, make dinner, do the laundry, run after the kids. I just keep staying busy so I don't think about it, because as soon as I do it's like being punched in the gut and the whole world seems to stop.
None of it makes any sense, her death, the changes, life... I miss her so much.
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Hello Becky,
I am so sorry for the loss of your mother. We only have one and life is never the same after, is it? I still cry about it and it was 20 years ago Halloween. Your father is NOT himself either, so try not to let what he says add to your grief. We all deal with it in different ways. With small children, you don't have much of a choice to let the world stop so you can let down,do you? It is normal to "compartmentalize", on the go one minute to keep it all together and fall to pieces the moment you have one second to reflect. I had an 6 yr old, a 17 mos old and a 3 wk old when Mommy passed. I couldn't help my dad, too far. I had to keep moving; if I sat down to nurse the baby, the tears and the milk flowed. Something I read once said something like this: The more tears that flow does nothing to prove one loved them more, because there are many ways we love them. Tears are just one way. Another is to live the way you know they would want you to live, as your best self. That helped me a lot after a couple of years of crying many times a day.
That numb shock feeling while still walking around keeps us from floating away down that river of tears and never coming back. Hopefully, it transforms and helps you deal with all the feelings and changes that have come when there is more time to consider what it means for you and your family. These boards are a godsend, whether you write or just read without posting. Everything is possible here (rants, "ugly" feelings released, feeling needy, whatever) without judgment. God Bless, Ruth
Thanks christianlee. It's so hard to get through the day. I feel numb.
I wish I was still commuting to my office. After I split with my husband in April, we moved in with my parents and I went from a SAHM who picked up side work from time to time to a full-time programmer. I left at 6AM and got back at 8PM. For four months, my mom watched the kids every single day.
Sitting here, shoving my 2 year old in front of a TV while I work and then letting his older sister (9, 7 and 5) watch him while I work is not only painful as a mother, but a reminder that my mother is gone.
So much has changed with her death, it's just mind boggling...
I understand that feeling. I am sorry for your loss.
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