Anonymous wrote:OP here.. I’m not sure if a therapist could tell me anything that would make me feel better. My DHs dad was killed instantly in a car wreck at 75 and of course he was devastated. His mom died slowly with dementia in her 80s in a home. I’m not trying to diminish the deaths of his parents but I can’t help feeling that I wouldn’t be so devastated if my dad died like either of his parents. Would I?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.. I’m not sure if a therapist could tell me anything that would make me feel better. My DHs dad was killed instantly in a car wreck at 75 and of course he was devastated. His mom died slowly with dementia in her 80s in a home. I’m not trying to diminish the deaths of his parents but I can’t help feeling that I wouldn’t be so devastated if my dad died like either of his parents. Would I?
OP any death of a parent is awful but dying slowly in a nursing home is pretty awful too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry for your loss.
But if he was cognizant enough to wonder why he was alone, I think he would be cognizant enough to understand why you could not be there. I think the hospital probably told him what the rule was and I think he probably understood that you would have liked to be there but could not. These rules are in place for a reason, because people need to stay away from their loved ones who have Covid, but most people cannot make that decision to do that unless they were barred from going in. I think he probably understood.
I posted this. Also, both of my parents have dementia. It is awful. No, you would not want your parent to die after years of dementia. It is awful.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry for your loss.
But if he was cognizant enough to wonder why he was alone, I think he would be cognizant enough to understand why you could not be there. I think the hospital probably told him what the rule was and I think he probably understood that you would have liked to be there but could not. These rules are in place for a reason, because people need to stay away from their loved ones who have Covid, but most people cannot make that decision to do that unless they were barred from going in. I think he probably understood.
Anonymous wrote:It’s been about a month since my 79 yr old dad died from covid. He wasn’t practicing all the precautions he should’ve been especially being at high risk. Age, 40 lbs overweight etc.. He was shocked when he tested positive after he started feeling “weird”, he said. Hospital few days later, ventilation 5 days later, kidney failure 2 weeks later, died 3 weeks after entering the hospital. I talked to him the first few days in the hospital and he sounded fine and he didn’t seem too worried. My issue is I can’t come to terms with his death. I can’t stop thinking about how he must’ve been feeling laying there without being able to see us. His children, his wife of 60 yrs, grandchildren. It keeps going through my mind over and over of him laying there thinking about his family and wondering why none of us was there to hold his hand. It’s devastating each time I think about it and I just cry all the time. I almost wish he had Alzheimer’s or something so he wouldn’t have had a clue of what was going on. It’s so heartbreaking I’m not sure if I’ll ever get over the way he died in isolation.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.. I’m not sure if a therapist could tell me anything that would make me feel better. My DHs dad was killed instantly in a car wreck at 75 and of course he was devastated. His mom died slowly with dementia in her 80s in a home. I’m not trying to diminish the deaths of his parents but I can’t help feeling that I wouldn’t be so devastated if my dad died like either of his parents. Would I?