Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think she should go but because she needs to help with planning a funeral. She needs to be with your dad in his final hours.
Why can’t op do it?
IMO they should both be there. I'd regret it forever if I went on vacation and wasn't there for my dad's passing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think she should go but because she needs to help with planning a funeral. She needs to be with your dad in his final hours.
Why can’t op do it?
Anonymous wrote:If your dad is not upset about her going, it isn't your place to be upset.
Anonymous wrote:My dad is expected to pass any day now. My sister lives nearby and has been helping with his care each day during or after work.
Before my dad really started to decline, he and my mom booked a rental property on a beach for a week, with plans to go with my sister and her family.
I just had a baby so I was never planning to go on a vacation this year.
My sister said her last goodbye to my dad today and plans to drive to the rental property tonight to go on vacation without my parents after all.
But shouldn’t she be staying nearby to help support my mom and help arrange the wake/funeral since my dad has only a couple more days to live?
I am doing what I can with an infant but it seems like a strange time to be going on vacation for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her *family* may need this vacation. Really need it.
It isn't -only- about your parents
Their life is not only about your parents
This! For 3 months she has been a mother, wife, daughter, caregiver, employee. She’s grieving, scared, exhausted. She’s been pulled in lots of directions until she’s stretched very thin. This is when her kids are out of school and she and her husband arranged to take vacation. They can’t just do this any old week of the year. Her kids have probably gotten much less of her attention these last 3 months. I seriously doubt she and her husband have been having date nights. This is their opportunity to reconnect, escape the daily grind of these past 3 months, and just be there for each other during this difficult time.
I was with my father for the last 40 days of his life. You can’t know what that’s like without going through it. He aged a decade in his last week. It was horrific to witness. My mother, brother and I were traumatized by mental images of him on his deathbed. Pack up your baby and get yourself there. Help your mom with the funeral arrangements. That’s the easy part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is her decision that she will have to live with the rest of her life. It is very possible she may feel guilt afterwards for not being there, in which unfortunately she will have to live the rest of her life with that guilt.
I was the primary caretaker of my MIL for several years. The last two weeks of her life I just couldn't handle watching her dye. My husband was there and it really traumatized him. I am glad I wasn't there and I'm sure she'd understand. Its not about being there when someone is dead, but about being there when they are alive. OP should support her sister on vacation and be the primary caretaker while she's gone. Seems simple enough to me.
Anonymous wrote:This vacation is the last worldly gift your father is able to give your sister.
You don't know how much this might mean to him.