Really struggling with anticipatory grief for my mum

Hi everyone, 

This is the first post I have made to a forum but I am really looking for some advice how to deal with anticipatory grief for my mum. She is now on palliative care with a few months to live. She had metastic colon cancer spread to her liver and lungs and simulatenously has breast cancer. She is only 66 and I'm 35 with 2 very young children. She only just retired 3 months before finding out she had stage IV cancer In March 2021 and was so looking forward to spending more time with her family and the grandchildren. She raised my brother and I as a single mum and we have the closest bond I just can't face this life without her. My younger brother is finding it all very difficult. Seeing him upset was the hardest thing I've had to witness and I can't stop thinking about it. He just had a baby and is heartbroken my mum won't meet any of his other children. I know its sad but we all talk 5 times a day or more.  I just can't imagine not hearing her voice anymore and I'm so scared to be lonely without her. My husband is not really a talker and he has no idea what to say.. so he says nothing at all. Sometimes I start to cry and he doesn't hug me. He just stands there in silence.  I sit over dinner in silence and worry about how lonely I'm about to get without my mum. I go between very strong feelings of grief to total denial to get my through each day. I have horrendous anxiety in the pit of my stomach and it's affecting my sleeping.  I need to get out of this rut because I'm missing the best last days with her and I feel so guilty for that. But when your "trying to make memories" it's the elephant in the room and it makes all our experiences feel so sad now? Usually I would talk to my mum about all this but I don't want her to worry about leaving me behind when she's dying. I just need advice or small tips on how people get through this period because I really am not coping well? 
 

thank you, 

A

  • Hi there, 

    I'm so sorry that you're going through this. 
     

    I am in a similar situation with my Dad, he's been unwell for 12 months after a fall from his lorry, finally further investigations have been done and last week was diagnosed with metastatic squamous cell carcinoma, an MRI last week has also identified possible tumours on his spine. He is now awaiting a PET scan to find the primary. He's only just gone 63, was still working full time, has always been a healthy 16.5 stone, but is now a pale, frail man and has lost 2 stone in weeks. 
     

    I am beyond heartbroken, I'm just not ready to lose my dad. I have teenage girls who adore their grandad, who are asking questions that we don't yet have answers for. It's been 6 weeks since they found the first sign of cancer and we still have no treatment plan, or definitive diagnosis. 
     

    I don't want to make this all about me but I thought I'd share my experience with you, and offer you a handhold. I also have a partner that doesn't know how to comfort me, he becomes very uncomfortable around emotions and at the moment I'm doing nothing but crying. 
     

    Do you have any close friends who are supportive? Keep talking on here also, as it does help. 
     

    Sending you and your mom my very best wishes. 

  • Hi 

    I'm sorry to read you're all on this heartbreaking journey.  I lost my Dad last week to metastatic prostate cancer. Dad was my world and I can completely relate to the 'elephant in the room' with every memory you make. Every get together was so happy at times but always so tainted by the inevitable.  Dad never stopped fighting and even at the end, we believe he held on as long as he could. The last few weeks and more so the last few days were the worst for me. Seeing Dad dying and in so much pain was unbearable but the one thing I'm trying to keep 'positive' about is that my Dad doesn't have to go through another painful day. He's at peace.  
    my advice is, relish all these days you have with your mum. Take lots of photos now and tell her you love her and how proud you are of her. That day sadly will come and you will get through it but live in the now. 
    I have 3 young children and without them I'd be in a hole!

    my husband lost his mum this year to cancer too so we both have that support for one another. I can only imagine that your husband just can't find the words that could possibley take your pain away and that can be difficult for both you and him. Maybe in time, he will work out a way to be there for you but keep communicating with him how you feel. 
    I'm happy to chat anytime. 
     

    much love 
     

  • Hi A,

    First of all, I'm so incredibly sorry that you are going through this right now. It's such a brutally tough road, and there's no training for how to walk it.

    My father died of Stage IV metastatic colon cancer four years ago last month; this coming weekend marks four years since we buried him, actually. Though my memory of that time is strangely patchy—I'm otherwise someone with a freakishly good memory, but October 2018 is just this weird splotchy haze—I do remember spending a lot of time on the phone with friends (my father had to relocate to a hospital away from either of our homes for treatment, so I didn't have any friends physically in that town). I'd go for walks between hospital shifts, and talk for 30-45 minutes with a varying rotation of friends. I think I was trying not to overburden any one person, as I seem to recall not actually talking with any single person more than once or twice that entire month, but I do recall those walks and those long conversations where they just let me let it out. I think I also remember offering to have these calls while they were driving between places, so it wasn't a whole hour out of their day for which they were only sitting on the phone with me.

    But I did have a lot of conversations like that, and they really did lift my spirits; because my mother and sister were going through the exact same thing I really couldn't talk it out with them, and of course I'd never have burdened my Dad with my feelings when he was in that state. I also had friends who couldn't really do phone calls but were happy to read and receive long texts from me, journal-like texts for which I just poured out my feelings; they'd usually send heart emojis back, sometimes would let me know they appreciated me sharing, but I never expected them to write back in full, and perhaps I didn't really want them to, as I wouldn't have had the mind to really process it anyway.  

    I will say that there are a lot more people in your community who want to be there for you than you realize, and it's not actually going to be the ones you expect. If you put it out on a couple of your group chats, for example, that you're going through this with your mother and would love a chat, I *guarantee* that someone is going to reach out with a virtual hug and a suggestion of a few times to talk—maybe even a few people. I learned with Dad that so many people just don't know what to say or how to say it in times like this, and so freeze up and don't say anything; but when you put out a specific request, like "I'd love to chat sometime, going through this with the kids especially is a lot" you'll be surprised at how many people will jump at that chance to meet your specific need. Hopefully you already have folks who've offered to help watch the kids for a few hours—maybe even a couple of angels who have offered overnight stays so you can spend longer stretches with your mother while your husband is out working and such—but I imagine there will be folks who would be glad to offer that, too. 

    Finally—you're not losing time with your mother by feeling these feelings. You are guaranteed to feel them; it just is what it is, because your brain is trying to help you make sense of what's happening and what's coming. It's a perfectly natural thing, and you're not wrong or weak for grieving her in advance. I know I did with Dad. Your work now, then, is figuring out good places to release those feelings so that they're less intense in the moments you do have with her. With me and Dad it was those phone calls and texts with friends; for you, especially with small children, you may need to find other additional ways to take the pressure off that fit in with your life schedules. If your husband struggles to handle your emotions, for example, maybe you can ask him to restructure his time in the coming weeks so that more of it is spent caring for the kids, giving you more time for the kind of self-care and emotional connection you need in this painful final period with your mother, even giving you more time with your mother outright. 

    Again, I am so sorry you are going through this. Cancer is just the most awful thing. A true thief of time. Wishing you and your family the very best XX

  • Hi, this is also the first time I have ever written into a forum but I relate to this thread so much. My mum is 66 and has metastatic bladder cancer, mum was only diagnosed 8 months or so ago and originally we thought she would be cured but at every turn we just got more and more bad news until we landed here. 
    She is currently in hospice care but we all know our time is now very limited and I'm struggling to comprehend life without my mum, I honestly can't imagine a world without her. I'm 32 with three young girls who don't really understand what's going on and sometimes im just in auto piolet getting through the days but other times I feel this crushing feeling where the reality hits me and I go back to not knowing how I'm going to cope. 
    sorry that was all a bit rambly, but I'm right there with you in what you're going through, and I see you. 
     

    x

  • Hi this is very similar to my mum who is dieing from bowel cancer she only retired recently just before finding out she has cancer she's about 66 as well I'm 37 and I'm devastated beyond words I have a wife and daughter but my mum was my best friend only person I talk to mainly other than my wife. I talked to my mum several times a day so don't feel that's sad as it's not and I'm a guy. I feel lost right now I hope in time I will feel less pain but right now unsure how I will cope. This was always my worst fear and it came true. My dad doesn't show emotions much he has always been the same me and my mum were always each others companion. I have a sister but me and her never got on well I don't feel supported at all. I haven't been on these forums before but I feel lost so thought I would see how other people are feeling and maybe it might help me to feel some peace my mum has had such a bad time with treatment almost worst than the cancer itself I dont want her to be in pain anymore even though I love her dearly I want her at peace.