Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm very sorry for your losses. I say this kindly, but please consider therapy. It's normal to feel sadness and a sense of loss. What you describe is not normal, though, especially after so many years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm very sorry for your losses. I say this kindly, but please consider therapy. It's normal to feel sadness and a sense of loss. What you describe is not normal, though, especially after so many years.
I think the main reason why I'm still struggling with the loss of my parents is that there was never a proper 'goodbye'.
My mom died only 7 months after her cancer diagnosis. She never felt able to talk about her terminal illness with me and my dad. She could talk about mundane things like the weather but not about her cancer.
My mom did have a private conversation with a priest 2 weeks before her death. In a way I feel glad that she did talk to someone.
Dad died of sepsis after 3 years of illness and a weakened immune system. Sepsis takes hold of the body very quickly.
With both deaths there was no opportunity for me to say goodbye and talk to them, there was no real closure.
Anonymous wrote:I think you can be happy for your friends and their experiences with living parents while still being sad about your own losses. They don’t have to be mutually exclusive. I say this as someone who experienced similar loss as you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm very sorry for your losses. I say this kindly, but please consider therapy. It's normal to feel sadness and a sense of loss. What you describe is not normal, though, especially after so many years.
I think the main reason why I'm still struggling with the loss of my parents is that there was never a proper 'goodbye'.
My mom died only 7 months after her cancer diagnosis. She never felt able to talk about her terminal illness with me and my dad. She could talk about mundane things like the weather but not about her cancer.
My mom did have a private conversation with a priest 2 weeks before her death. In a way I feel glad that she did talk to someone.
Dad died of sepsis after 3 years of illness and a weakened immune system. Sepsis takes hold of the body very quickly.
With both deaths there was no opportunity for me to say goodbye and talk to them, there was no real closure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm very sorry for your losses. I say this kindly, but please consider therapy. It's normal to feel sadness and a sense of loss. What you describe is not normal, though, especially after so many years.
I think the main reason why I'm still struggling with the loss of my parents is that there was never a proper 'goodbye'.
My mom died only 7 months after her cancer diagnosis. She never felt able to talk about her terminal illness with me and my dad. She could talk about mundane things like the weather but not about her cancer.
My mom did have a private conversation with a priest 2 weeks before her death. In a way I feel glad that she did talk to someone.
Dad died of sepsis after 3 years of illness and a weakened immune system. Sepsis takes hold of the body very quickly.
With both deaths there was no opportunity for me to say goodbye and talk to them, there was no real closure.
Anonymous wrote:I have both parents at almost 90, almost completely disabled, still insisting on living on their own 3000 miles away. Broke, won’t listen to reason, family member living off them which is why they are broke.
Want to adopt them?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm very sorry for your losses. I say this kindly, but please consider therapy. It's normal to feel sadness and a sense of loss. What you describe is not normal, though, especially after so many years.