Anonymous wrote:I lost my mother--my best friend, really--a few years ago, and while the initial shock and pain are behind me, I still experience a lingering sadness. My thoughts often go back to the years just before she got sick, when my kids were still small (or being born) and all the great times we had together. We were always close, but my becoming a mother (and her becoming a grandmother) brought us even closer. I miss her so much; I miss talking to her, being with her, seeing her with my children.
These "after shocks" related to my mother's death seem also to be overlapping with general midlife crisis stuff. My kids are growing up and no longer need me as much, my work is so-so, my body is aging, and all told my life isn't exactly turning out the way I thought it would. I've tried talk therapy, which helped a bit but only up to a point. I also try to be grateful every single day for all that I do have, and volunteer often in my community where I can. Still, I can't seem to shake this notion that all the good stuff in life has already happened (going off to college, living on my own and growing into my own person, falling in love, starting a family, etc.).
Has anyone else experienced being stuck like this after the death a parent? Are there any authors or other resources anyone can point to to help me move on and get unstuck?
Anonymous wrote:It has been 12 years for me OP and I still cry at least once a week. The grieving process is long and different for everyone. You are supposed to be sad about losing her-- that won't go away. But you need to continue living your life. Are you doing that?
Just to tell you I watch Vampire Diaries with my 15 year old DD. She was 3 when my mom died so doesn't really remember her. One story line recently was about a character losing her mother. This stupid show had me bawling. My DD finally began to realize how much I miss my mom still. She was surprised by that. It was a good teaching moment for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the one everyone thinks is so awful, but I can tell you as a child who grew up with a mother who did this exact same behavior and expected me to be her emotional crutch, it is not right. It is not fair. It is a burden to the child. But go ahead and live in denial.
I am wrong, you are right. Go ahead and use your child as the crutch.
NP here. There is a very big continuum between using your child as a crutch for unresolved grief, and occasionally displaying sadness at the premature loss of a parent. Let's try not to jump to conclusions on an online forum, and project our own experience onto others.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the one everyone thinks is so awful, but I can tell you as a child who grew up with a mother who did this exact same behavior and expected me to be her emotional crutch, it is not right. It is not fair. It is a burden to the child. But go ahead and live in denial.
I am wrong, you are right. Go ahead and use your child as the crutch.