Anonymous wrote:I think it's more abnormal when an old (like 85+) person dies of natural causes and their child acts like it is the shock of the century. Did you think they would live to be 100+?
Anonymous wrote:I think it's more abnormal when an old (like 85+) person dies of natural causes and their child acts like it is the shock of the century. Did you think they would live to be 100+?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's more abnormal when an old (like 85+) person dies of natural causes and their child acts like it is the shock of the century. Did you think they would live to be 100+?
Exactly. You should be be prepared for your parents' deaths by the time they're 60. A heart attack could come along and take them away in an instant.
Why do so many people have such unnatural and unhealthy attitudes towards death?
You post s**t like this on every thread. 60 is not “old” nowadays, but regardless, there’s nothing psychological about being shocked or devastated when people die at 60. My kids will be in their twenties when I’m 60.
And while I agree that it’s not shocking when a parent in their 80s dies, it can still cause very deep grief. But there’s no right or wrong way to experience it.
My mom cried when my great granddad died at 100. Just because he was very old didn't mean she wasn't sad about his death (my grandmother predeceased him). Everybody dies, it doesn't mean death isn't sad.
Anonymous wrote:This feels pretty typical to me, but there is no “normal”. I remember when I was 14 and my aunt died—I cried nonstop for a week, couldn’t go to school, and still felt pretty normal after—but losing an aunt is different from losing a parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he had been very sick for a while, I think it's normal. We expect our parents to die. If they've been sick or are very old, it's sometimes a relief and we've done our grieving slowly over the years. If you lost your kid and he was like this, I'd be concerned.
+1
My husband was devastated when his parent received a terminal diagnosis and extremely stressed throughout the period of their illness. He has outwardly seemed pretty “normal” since their death, though I know he feels sad and misses them.
+2. DP. My husband experienced this when his parent received a terminal diagnosis and throughout the illness. And more “normal” after.
When my mom died I was in shock for months after. We also had a tough relationship so her passing was very very complicated to say the least. I didn’t (and still don’t) related to all the things people said to me about grief or a parent passing.
This doesn't make any sense. If you didn't have much of a relationship with your mother, then what did you even lose when she died?
Sounds like you need therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's more abnormal when an old (like 85+) person dies of natural causes and their child acts like it is the shock of the century. Did you think they would live to be 100+?
Exactly. You should be be prepared for your parents' deaths by the time they're 60. A heart attack could come along and take them away in an instant.
Why do so many people have such unnatural and unhealthy attitudes towards death?
You post s**t like this on every thread. 60 is not “old” nowadays, but regardless, there’s nothing psychological about being shocked or devastated when people die at 60. My kids will be in their twenties when I’m 60.
And while I agree that it’s not shocking when a parent in their 80s dies, it can still cause very deep grief. But there’s no right or wrong way to experience it.
Anonymous wrote:I was notified late at night that my Father had died (it was going to be sometime w/in the year). DH was asleep and I let him sleep. I didn't need comforting. What I needed was to get some things done: packing, making travel arrangements, oth arrangements to be gone. Filled him in on details in the morning.
I often find someone else's reaction to what they think I must be feeling -- their reaction, that adds stress for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's more abnormal when an old (like 85+) person dies of natural causes and their child acts like it is the shock of the century. Did you think they would live to be 100+?
Exactly. You should be be prepared for your parents' deaths by the time they're 60. A heart attack could come along and take them away in an instant.
Why do so many people have such unnatural and unhealthy attitudes towards death?