Can’t live without my Mum

I lost my Mum nearly 3 weeks ago and had her funeral yesterday where I brought her home to be buried with my Nan and Granddad. It’s not any easier in fact I think I’m getting worse. I feel like I have nothing to live for now. She was my best friend and I talked to her 3 times a day when I was away working and spent so much time with her when I wasn’t. I feel the same about things she will never get to enjoy anymore, I don’t want to enjoy them either. I felt mistakes were made and she could have been around longer. I don’t know if I want to carry on, I feel like there no’s point. People say but she would want you to do this and that but they have no idea of the pain I’m in. I have no partner or children just a career that I don’t care about anymore. I don’t know what to do.

  • Thank you Cheryl, To truly find someone who knows how I feel is a relief. I am so sorry for the loss of your mum. I know that what you have said is true, my mum would be horrified if she knew my thoughts. My friends and family would be too, I'm a brilliant actor though so I doubt they ever will. Although I google these terrible things I would not put my children through this pain deliberately and that is what stops me, they cannot lose their mum too. I am starting to take steps to get better, I have started counselling and I am hopeful that this will help me. 

  • It sounds like we are all feeling the same, it is comforting to know I'm not the only one feeling like this.

    My mum would also be really mad at me if she knew what I was thinking at times. I hear her telling me off! She wouldn't want me to be the person I have become. But I don't want to be who I was, in fact I can't be that person without my mum. I too am plodding along for the sake of my children. Mum always put her grandchildren first, fiercely protective over them and I have to keep going to protect them like my mum did. I'm doing it for her.

    Every day is foggy in my head, no clear thoughts. This week the pain of losing her has debilitated me, I haven't wanted to leave the house. I've been reading all my text messages from her crying buckets.

    Sorry this is all over the place...

  • That's good. I have my second counselling session tomorrow and I start back at work on Monday which is a big deal for me.

    I get very sad that we are having to endure all this and I think to myself, 4 months ago everything was fine. Mum lived with us and we had a nice life. Mum would walk my daughter to the bus stop and come home and put her feet up. My partner and I were busy working and we all had dinner together. How could we not have known what was around the corner? Were where the signs that mum was so close to death? I thought we would watch mum slowly deteriorate over the next 10 to 15 years and die in her late 80s. To go bang at 74 has been the biggest shock for us all.

    It seems that you experienced something similar.

    Cheryl x

  • Bobs,

     

    I've had a terrible week as well. Perhaps the arrival of the cold weather hasnt helped. Putting on the heating for the first time yesterday and feeling the radiators in mums living room and bedroom heat up really upset me.

    Everything just seems pointless and like you I'm carrying on for my 12 year old.  My mums death has devastated her and she cannot lose me too.

    Somehow we will all get through this.its nouce to have found a group who all feel the same.

     

    Cheryl x

  • I'm struggling to even enter my mums house at the moment, it's too painful. I know I have all her things to sort but just can't face it. Also feels like I'm removing her from there if I do. 

    My mum was only 61 and even though 2 years ago we were told her cancer was incurable I didn't think she'd be gone so quick. Maybe I was deluded/stupid to think she'd have longer but she was actually so fit and well on her chemo. It all happened so fast, even her consultant was shocked at the speed she deteriorated. I'm sure in a way that was better for my mum because she wouldn't have wanted to go on for long suffering but I just feel robbed. I hate cancer, it destroys everything! 

    Thank you for replying. No one else seems to get me right now.

  • Hi, yes your story is very similar to mine except my mum didn't live with us, she was 77, living very independently in her own home and loving life, we did everything together though, I saw her most days and if I didn't see her I always rang her. We had a lovely holiday booked together but she passed two weeks before we were due to go. I like you thought we have at least another 10 years with her. My mum was out shopping with my niece when she started to feel unwell, they had a meal in a pub and it started very soon after, my niece took her to the walk in centre and they said she had food poisoning. We looked after her all that night treating that diagnosis, how wrong we were to do that, I feel I should have known that she was much more poorly than a bout of food poisoning. By the time I called the ambulance it was too late to save her, they took her straight to theatre but it was too late, her bowel was ischaemic and there was nothing they could do, she died. I torture myself with the thought of the pain she was in and all we did was give her paracetamol. How could someone who was loving, kind and generous suffer in her last hours like that, why didn't I do something sooner. I feel I didn't listen to her, I just went along with what the doctor said and didn't think for myself. I truly feel if I'd taken her to a&e sooner she would still be here, it's torture. 
     

    Lisa x 

  • Hi Bobs 

    I know what you mean. My mum didnt have cancer but after scouring the internet,this site is great for connecting with people who have lost their mum and feeling similar thoughts irrelevant of what took them away from us. Your mum was very young at 61. It's so unfair. Mine was 74 but so young acting,funny and mentally with it. 

    Cancer has affected me greatly in the past with my best friend and grandmother dying of breast and ovarian cancers and my dad was in remission for non Hodgkin's lymphoma when he suffered a massive heart attack and died.

    Just do your mums things as and when you feel ready. I cleared all mums clothes and shoes the weekend she died. She lived with me and I couldn't face a wardrobe of clothes that she would never wear again. I'm only just closing bank accounts now as the probate only came through last week.

    I doubt I will ever face dealing with the remaining things although I do plan to scatter her ashes in 2 weeks time. They are sitting in her wardrobe and I would like them laid to rest.

    For me its baby steps and I still cant plan further than today. People are inviting me to catch ups in november and I just cant think that far ahead. I want to scream 'do you realise my my mum just died?' And then I realise that they probably don't even think about it.

    Cheryl x

  • Hi lisa 

    A meal in a pub wouldn't have caused this. Did she have a post mortem? 

    I have exactly the same thoughts as you though. I was having a lovely meal in a pub with mum with no signs she was unwell. The following day mum wasnt right and I told her I wanted to take her to hospital. She appeared a bit confused and was dropping everything she picked up. She left the tap on in the kitchen and forgot to turn the oven off. If only I had recognised signs of a stroke. She told me to stop treating her like a baby and to go to work.

    That night my partner dragged her to a and e where they found a blood clot on her brain. Although she was discharged from hospital 5 days later almost her old self she had a massive brain hemorrhage a week later.

    I beat myself up that I didnt force her to the hospital and wonder if I could have saved her.

    Thankfully the coroner insisted on a post mortem which revealed that mum had severe heart disease, numerous blocked arteries around heart and in her neck and quite honestly mum was never going on till her 80s.

    A massive heart attack or stroke were imminent.

    It has helped me slightly.

     

    Cheryl x

  • Hi, no there was no post mortem because mum had been to theatre and the cause of death was so obvious. They explained that mum had 'possibly' had some sort of cardiac episode hours earlier that she or anyone else hadn't been aware of and that a clot had probably been thrown off and this blocked the small arteries to her bowel, they said a post mortem would not be able to pinpoint the exact location of the blockage as it would have been tiny. We decided as a family not to pursue this any further, we know now that the 'food poisoning' was a red herring that altered everybody's judgement. 
     

    Lisa x 

  • Hi lisa,

    We knew that mum had died from a catastrophic brain hemorrhage. We were given the option of a post mortem but told the likelihood of finding out why mum had suffered a brain hemorrhage was very low so as a family we decided to decline.

    2 weeks later we were told that the coroner were now insisting on one as mum had a small op 15 minutes before her brain hemorrhage under local anaesthetic and they wanted to know if there had been any medical negligence.

    I'm so pleased that the coroner insisted on this as we found out that the surgery had no relevance to mums brain bleed and we got to know the full extent of mums health which has shown us mum didn't have a long life ahead of her.

    We also found put that mum had a historic heart attack that she knew nothing about so it sounds like the doctors explanation for your mum is probably right. I have since learnt that its very common for women to have small heart attacks without realising and to have nothing more than indigestion like pain or upper back pain. 

    I think it was probably our mums time to go and as hard as it us neither if them suffered for long. Reading this site has shown me how some peoples lived ones suffer for months in agony and I am so pleased that mum didnt.

    Of course the sudden passing makes it very hard on us as we remember them fit healthy and happy and cannot understand how they can leave us in a puff of smoke.

    Thinking of you.

    Cheryl x