Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's normal for you to feel this way. It's also normal for people to worry about their 90+ year old parents. They can both be right.
I think you really should see a therapist about this. I think you haven't worked through a lot of the grief. You also need to be able to think about how you'd want your own kids to feel. Wouldn't you want them to care for you when you're elderly? You can't change a relationship you never had with your parents but you can make sure yours is strong with the family you still have.
This.
There's room for both sets of emotions. But not always in the same conversation or at the same time. And the people you process each set of emotions with may not overlap. It's ok. I do think therapy would be a really good place to say all this stuff out loud and feel validated and supported.
I am sorry you didn't get to have your parents for longer.
Anonymous wrote:It's normal for you to feel this way. It's also normal for people to worry about their 90+ year old parents. They can both be right.
I think you really should see a therapist about this. I think you haven't worked through a lot of the grief. You also need to be able to think about how you'd want your own kids to feel. Wouldn't you want them to care for you when you're elderly? You can't change a relationship you never had with your parents but you can make sure yours is strong with the family you still have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people lost their mom when they were young children. Should you therefore not be allowed to grieve your mother’s death at age 51? After all, you had so much more time with her than they got with their mothers.
Right? I know two families where the mother died in her 30s or 40s. If OP wants to see it as a competition, or grief as being something you need to "earn," then by her logic, she shouldn't get to feel so sad about losing her mother at 54. But that's NOT how it works. Everyone grieves their own grief, and you don't have to earn feeling sad or struggling with losing a parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people lost their mom when they were young children. Should you therefore not be allowed to grieve your mother’s death at age 51? After all, you had so much more time with her than they got with their mothers.
Right? I know two families where the mother died in her 30s or 40s. If OP wants to see it as a competition, or grief as being something you need to "earn," then by her logic, she shouldn't get to feel so sad about losing her mother at 54. But that's NOT how it works. Everyone grieves their own grief, and you don't have to earn feeling sad or struggling with losing a parent.
Anonymous wrote:It's normal for you to feel this way. It's also normal for people to worry about their 90+ year old parents. They can both be right.
I think you really should see a therapist about this. I think you haven't worked through a lot of the grief. You also need to be able to think about how you'd want your own kids to feel. Wouldn't you want them to care for you when you're elderly? You can't change a relationship you never had with your parents but you can make sure yours is strong with the family you still have.
Anonymous wrote:Some people lost their mom when they were young children. Should you therefore not be allowed to grieve your mother’s death at age 51? After all, you had so much more time with her than they got with their mothers.
Anonymous wrote:My mom died 20 years ago at 60 and I totally understand what you’re feeling. I find myself completely unsympathetic (secretly) when people lose their grandparents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It might be normal, but it's also irrational and unproductive. People are going to grieve their parents, and it's not a competition. Their grief doesn't have anything to do with yours. They love their parents and they will be sad and struggle when they die. Again, it's not a competition or a zero-sum game. They have the right to be as sad as they feel.
+1