I grieve the life she should have had

It’s been four and a half years since I lost my dear mum, shortly after my 20th birthday. She had been terminally ill for two years after breast cancer spreading as tumours in her brain, and she suffered so much - it was a truly awful, traumatising experience watching her deteriorate mentally and physically until she couldn’t move or speak. I was only 18/19 and there was just no way to describe the horror of it all. She was a beautiful, selfless, funny, caring and genuinely good person. She always wanted to wrap me and my sisters up in bubble wrap and protect us from the world. 

out of the whole broad myriad of emotional waves you go through grieving, one that really hits my gut is every time I remember her being unwell, and her knowing she was going to die. I know she is now at peace, but it kills me to think she would have spent so much time with her own thoughts, scared to die, scared to leave us, heart broken that she wouldn’t watch us grow up, scared she was cognitively decaying… I’m crying thinking about it. I get so distraught thinking how unfair it is that she had to experience that at 54 instead of living another three decades enjoying her life, which had already been tough. I wish I could go back and hug her just one more time to tell her everything would be okay. Sometimes I wish she had died of something sudden so she didn’t have to anticipate it. 

how do you deal with the immense feelings of sympathy and pain for your lost loved one? Most of my grief is missing her, but so much of it is the “it’s not fair she suffered like that”…. 

  • Welcome to the forum, amy1999.

    I'm sorry to hear about what your mum went through and the pain you are experiencing. Losing a loved one after witnessing their suffering is a heavy burden to bear and dealing with these intense emotions can be overwhelming. It's important to give yourself permission to grieve and seek support from others who understand, which I hope you'll find here among other members who have gone through a similar situation.

    While the pain of loss may never fully fade, I hope you find solace in the memories of your mother.

    Take care of yourself during this difficult time.

    All the best,

    Renata, Cancer Chat Moderator

  • I lost my dad in October, I was 20 at the time and he was 49. I completely understand the its not fair element and i have been struggling with this a lot lately. Not knowing how much he knew or felt as things got worse. He was such a proud man he would rarely say he was in pain when he likely was, i hate the feeling that he suffered. Also knowing that he didn’t want me or my sisters to see him in that way.

    More than that it feels so isolating to be grieving so strongly when everyone around me doesn’t see how hard it still is and will continue to be.