Dad dying, he is angry, we are angry

My dad has lung cancer and we’ve known it was terminal since August last year. He has been an alcoholic for as long as I can remember (I am now in my forties), and he was aggressive and verbally abusive (occasionally physically towards my mum). I don’t think he had the best upbringing with his dad so I have some understanding and empathy for he fact he is an angry man who has felt he needed alcohol to feel better, but it has created anger and resentment for me and my 2 sisters. 

 

My mum stuck with him through it all and she says he is her best friend and she is very very upset. We are also upset at the situation but we can’t shake off the feeling of resentment. I have a child now and I will always put her first. 

 

He went into hospital a week and a half ago and went downhill quickly. He said he wanted home and mum said she wanted that too so we pushed to make that happen then realised it was going to be too traumatic for my mum so we decided he should go to the hospice. We’re told he has dayz He has been angry with us all ever since. Yesterday I got really angry and had to leave the room. Logically I know he’s not rational and it’s not personal but it just feels like a continuation of what he was like when he was drunk. He only stopped drinking because the cancer stopped him doing so. He says as much. 

Despite saying all this, I don’t believe my dad is a bad man. I think he’s a human being who was dealt a *** hand growing up and hasn’t had the emotional tools to deal with it and it’s impacted his wife and family. But it doesn’t stop me feeling angry at times. 

I’m fed up being angry but it stops the real sense of sadness setting in, I guess that’s what anger is, a defence mechanism and my dad is using it just now, this time to fight against his death. 

I feel best when I feel nothing, but logically I know I’m going to feel all sorts of *** ways as this progresses and he dies and I’m tired at the thought. My mum and dad have taken up so much emotional energy for my sisters and I all our lives and we just want to have happy lives. Im lucky to have them both.

 

is it normal to feel this way and is there any advice on how things might feel when he dies and how to get through it? I need to be there for my mum, my baby daughter, and my husband (his dad has also been diagnosed with cancer so he’s seeing all this and it’s frightening him). But I also need to look after myself or I’ll be no good to anyone.

 

any advice welcome. Thanks. 

  • Hi there and welcome ...

    Firstly your amazing on how you've stayed by him over the years .. I used to work in a rehab so know a lot about alcohol and what it does to the whole family ...

    I think you need to stop feeling guilty or angry ... Anger just Fester's and like cancer grows ... You said you can forgive your dad... Then be kind to your heart and forgive your self ... 

    My dad was brutally abused by his step mum (use that word loosly) and he was beaten till another family took him in .. who showed him as a teenager what love and caring ment ... Well he was the most gentle kind caring man who showed only a side that was like the B F G ... Stiries, little bits of magic tricks and he'd was the true meaning of the word GENTLEman ... 

    So yes know there was a reason for your dad's attitude but it's no excuse to make his kids growing up years taken from them ... I think your mum is one of those that have unconditional love for him ... He is one lucky man ... Sadly who never realised just what he had in a loving wife , and the mirical of children ..

    So yes he's better in a hospice because he would have been very demanding at home ... Hold your head up high now, and after his journey is over .. know you did far more for him then he deserved ... And if I were him, I'd be proud of all of you ... Maybe get some councilling after ... Ask mcmillan for advice on where to get it ... Be strong my hunny ... And look in the mirror, and know you are just human trying to make sense of it all, when there is none ... Sending you a big hug ...  Chrissie   xx

  • Thank you for taking the time to reply.

    My Dad passed away yesterday morning and I feel so differently about things and feel I can see things as they really are. 

    My mum, myself and my two sisters were there when he died. I live further away than they do so it took me a bit longer to get there. As soon as I got there and spoke to him, he stopped pushing himself and passed away. I’m finding it both comforting and haunting. 

    The night before he died, I realised I wouldn’t be able to have a conversation with him again and that I wouldn’t truly be able to understand his side of things from him in his words and I was, and still am, devastated. I wish I’d decided to sit with him and ask him more about his life. It just felt too hard and was always something I felt I ‘still had time’ to do.

    As I said above, he wasn’t a bad guy, he was a guy dealt a crap hand who didn’t always make the best choices. But we still loved him and he loved us and those were the last words I said to him before he passed away. I keep wondering if he heard them, I’ll wonder forever.

    im glad your dad was a kind and gentle man and thank you again for being so kind as to reply, your words really helped me on Saturday.

    x

     

  • Hi there 

    So so sorry he passed, but sounds like a kind passing ... like one we all hope for ... and yes I so glad you love him, he was your dad, I know from fostering at one point, children love their parents no matter what .. and he was a very lucky man to have you all there at the end .. 

    And I've learned the hearing is the last thing to go... even when they no longer cancomunicate ... so believe he heard you ... you truly are a daughter to be proud of ... 

    I just wanted you not to feel guilty about anything ... we spend time thinking that when, you did so much ..  so yes miss him, love him, but let your mind and heart know you did o.k ... in a sad situation ... but I'm so pleased you sound stronger ... I just wish every child could have the same caring I'd had from dad ... it would be my one wish for the world, that every child knows love growing up ,.. 

    So from my heart ... I'm proud of you and how you have done, and that love still in your heart ... maybe we should all give our little ones one extra cuddle to day ...  sending you a big hug ... Chrissie

  • so sorry JoJo.   I bet he did hear or feel your love - sounds like he was waiting for you to be there to say goodbye.  Take care of yourself in the coming weeks and months xx

     

     

  • Hi this is my second post ime realy touched by the way you stuck by your dad .my partner was married to a alcoholic and his daughter were both damaged by this so you have my sympathys yes some dont have the tools to cope with life . But you and your mum are still here and your family are the important ones now so just take one day at a time try and organise some bereavment counciling perhaps it may help you all going together being with your mum now is so important as she will be feeling so lost but the pain does go but grieving has no timescale you all did so much for your dad to me you were all wonderful .best wish paul