Dying is a lonely journey. Not only for the sick person but also for the family. As hard as we may try to avoid death, the truth is that we do a lousy job of it. Science and medicine will certainly postpone it, even staying healthy might seem to delay it, but the harsh reality is that death does not wait for you, it does not ask you, and it does not listen to you. Death ignores your feelings and wants; you do not matter to death…Death is the only certainty in life! We need to remember that our existence here is fragile, and we never have as much time with people as we think we do. If there is someone or someones out there that you love, don’t neglect that and don’t put off engaging with them because waits for no-one… Vic's Journey ended on 18 January 2013 at 10:35. She was the most courageous person in the world and has inspired thousands of people all over the world. Vic's two boys are monuments of her existence. She was an amazing mother, daughter, sister and friend. I will miss you today, tomorrow and forever my Angle Child.
when a mother cries
her tears stab at her daughter’s heart
as they plummet to the floor
when a mother cries
he daughter cries too
because her heroine is wounded and she doesn’t know how or why
she cries because she cannot rid her mother of the pain
she cries most of all because she loves her mother
when a daughter cries because her mother cries,
her mother cries more
because her weakness has hurt her child
she cries because it hurts to know she’s the cause of her daughter’s tears.
she cries most of all because she loves her daughter
once the tears have ceased however
love remains
the love forever shared between a mother and her daughter
Vic could live like this. We could live like this. Please let this continue! Today I pray that this is the case. I pray for a miracle. I pray that Vic is in remission.
On the 17th of September Vicky was accepted onto the Hospice program. Dr Sue Walters, the Hospice doctor and Sr Ceza, Hospice Nursing Sister, thought she would die within days. Vic was barely conscious and too weak to walk. Vic was breathing but had already ceased to live!
In two days’ time we celebrate Vic’s “One Month with Hospice” and I think she is getting stronger every day. We still have bad days but her pain control is great! Vic is reasonably mobile; she laughs and spends constructive time with the boys and the family! She is sorting out photos and all sorts of things that she has neglected for months. She is spending less time in bed. She is sleeping less and eating more.
It is as if she has a new lease on life!
Could it be possible that the pain was killing her? Is it possible that the adhesions have stopped their devastating path of destruction? That just maybe the sepsis has cleared?
Vic still needs assistance with basics. Vic could live like this. We could live like this. Please let this continue! Today I pray that this is the case. I pray for a miracle. I pray that Vic is in remission.
Vicky constantly says “sorry Mommy.” She says “sorry Mommy” when she vomits, when she is in pain, when she is ill…
Then there is a flood of “thank you’s”….. Vic says “thank you” all the time! It drives me mad! I don’t want her to apologize for being ill and I don’t want her to continuously thank me.
Vic’s situation, our situation as a family, is unfair, arbitrary, frustrating and so sad. Vic is blameless, helpless, a victim of poor sick genes and doctor error.
I know that Vic is sad about her situation. I know that Vic is sad for what the family is going through. She is sad because she cannot be the mother she wants to be. She is sad that she has a lonely, sad life devoid of partner love, physical love and friendships not based on pity. She sad because she does not have a social life and neither do we as a family. Vic is sad that she is dying in the prime of her life. Vic is sad that she has achieved so little in her life (by her standards only).
We no longer have lunches with friends, outings or holidays. Life has ground to a slow, agonizing halt… Vic floats from one pain filled day in bed to the next. When she has a good and busy day, like yesterday, she pays the price for weeks. Vic has not been out of bed today. She is deadly pale and drawn.
It is hard for her not having privacy. Vic is embarrassed that I hold her hair or wipe her face when she is vomiting. Yet she needs me with her….
We are however in this together as a family. It is a rough journey for everyone.
“I am so sorry Mommy…” …it echoes through my heart.
Jon-Daniel has had the best birthday ever! Yesterday he left school early for extra time with his Mom, we had a fun family lunch and then there was a cake and tea last night at his Dad’s.
Today it was his birthday party and Vic was well enough to enjoy it! It was a glorious summer day; the pool was a sparkling blue, the trees and grass a vivid green…. The sun shone and sparkled on Vic’s hair as she stood watching the children play.
Vic helped laying out the table, she bought helium balloons, she refused to sit or lie down. She insisted on carrying Jon-Daniels birthday cake! She started the singing. She laughed and glowed with pride. For a single day Vic looked just like a normal, healthy Mommy. I could hear her heart crying…. “this is the last birthday I will have with my son”
I thank God for a glorious day and memories. I thank God for granting Vic the joy of celebrating her baby boy’s 14th birthday.
Today was another milestone for Vic and the family. Jon-Daniel turned 14 and he woke up to his loving mother’s birthday wishes and kisses.
I could not help but think back to the day he started “big” school. Vic was violently ill but refused to be admitted to hospital before Jon-Daniel was taken to “big” school and settled into his new class… Seven years ago she placed her own life at risk to take her son’s hand in hers and lead him into a scary new phase of his little life.
Vic kneeled next to his little chair and told him school was going to be one of the greatest adventures in his life. She told him she loved him and he was in good hands. His brother would look out for him at break. He had to concentrate and listen to his teacher. “Mommy will see you after school” she promised.
When we left the classroom Vic collapsed. Colin took her straight to hospital. Silent tears ran down her cheeks.
“Mommy, please bring the boys to hospital this afternoon. I promised Jon-Daniel I will see him after school.”
I do not remember the exact details of that particular hospitalization episode but I do remember what a milestone Vic reached that day…
Yesterday my little girl dragged her body out of bed. When Vic and the boys moved home a year ago I bought her a doughnut-making machine. She had not used it. Jon-Daniel loves baby doughnuts and keeps asking her when they are going to make doughnuts. So, Vic made baby doughnuts with Jon-Daniel yesterday afternoon. It wasn’t a big batch but she was absolutely exhausted and in terrible pain after she finished his “birthday doughnuts”.
I wonder if he will ever realise what a superhuman effort it took for his mother to make him birthday doughnuts….
Vic bought Jon-Daniel a sound system for his 14th birthday some time ago. It has been wrapped and ribboned for a while. I am so grateful Vic was able to give it to him, in person, this morning…. He was absolutely delighted! The boys had to go to their Dad this evening so Vic made the decision to take Jon-Daniel out of school early today. We did not have the normal “tea and cake” thing at home as we simply did not have enough time. We went to lunch and had a wonderful time! We screeched with laughter. The boys joked with Vic because she is so short…. (She loves being ragged about her (lack of) height) and the boys love humouring her!
“Mom can’t do a ‘high five’ Oumie – she is too short…” They just carried on and on joking with their mom.
Late afternoon, after the boys left, Vic and I quietly sat basking in the milestone day….
“It is so sad Mommy. I wish I could write to her and tell her what an inspiration she is to me…” Vic said. “I am so scared…. I have a hollow feeling on my tummy.”
We just sat in silence. I held her little hand knowing what she was saying. I did not have words for my little girl.
“I have such a good idea for your Christmas gift but I need the boys to help me.” she said
“Well, in 6 weeks’ time the boys will have finished their exams and they will have lots of time to help you.” I said
“I can’t wait that long Mommy. My health is too precarious. I must do it now…..”
With a hollow feeling on my tummy I wonder whether we will reach our next milestone….
Two days ago I reblogged a post “Is there pain after death” written by a Dr James Salwitz. This post elicited some comments – mainly from Vic. Vic has started reading the odd post of my blog. In a way I am truly okay with it but on the other hand I find it difficult to blog my fears and emotions knowing that Vic may read the post. I find that I have become guarded in what I am writing. I am thinking that I should blog about stuff that may allay Vic’s fears….
Yesterday Vic asked “Mommy, I know what we believe in but what if there is more pain after I died?”
“You read my blog?” I asked.
“Yes” Vic replied.
“Sweetie, I believe that when the time comes our loved ones will be our guardian angels and hold our hands whilst we cross over….”
“I know that Mommy but what if I am still in pain… What if the pain does not stop?”
“Sweetie, the pain that continues after death is the emotional pain that belong to the loved ones that are left behind. That is what the post is about…..”
Tears welled up in Vic’s eyes and she said “I know that Mommy but what if I am still in pain… What if the pain does not stop? What if your pain does not stop?”
Andrew, http://lymphomajourney.wordpress.com/, commented as follows… “Even before one leaves, I always thought it more difficult on my family to watch me go through what was pretty aggressive treatment than on me.”
sbcallahan, http://thedrsays.org commented…”this is one of the difficult things about being the one who leaves. to know that your loved ones are going to suffer more than they already have is heartbreaking.”
“how to die? I have watched many die over the years and the range is as you would imagine. there were those that just could not let go and suffered every indignity to their body and soul. of course others went quietly with love around them. I have not decided if I want to be alone or with loved ones by my side. is there a way to make it easier for them? would they rather receive a phone call with the news or be at bedside? either way it will hurt them, not me of course as I am the one leaving. I would be lying if I said I don’t think of how I will miss so much. the thing is I have had so much, so much more than others and it seems selfish to complain. what they will go through is tremendous compared to what I will go through. I will sleep eternally and they will live. the best I can hope for them is peace of mind and future happiness. I want them to think of me and smile as I do now thinking of them.” http://thedrsays.org/2011/03/
I am beginning to think it is easier to be the person leaving than the one being left. I have always known that about relationships and breaking up but now realize that it is the same when someone you love is dying. My husband became suddenly angry and I knew there was something wrong. it is so unlike him to get angry over nothing that I was completely off guard. we had been watching the movie “steel magnolia’s” and he asked me what Julia Roberts was dying from and I told him kidney failure. later when he was able to talk, he shared that it had reminded him of my own kidney failure and near death. we live in limbo waiting each week for blood tests to know if I am back in failure or good for a few more days. I don’t really think about it and when he shared his fear my heart ached. The sad thing is I have no fear and realize more and more how hard this is for him. I know that he will be fine in the end but it is hard for him to imagine he will be fine without me. It is so much harder to be the one being left behind.http://thedrsays.org/2011/03/25/the-one/
Vic so often tells me how worried she is about the family. She worries about how the boys, her dad and I will cope. Whether we will cope…. whether we will be able to get over her eventual passing…. Andrew and sbcallahan write about their fears… for their loved ones. It is a fear that all terminally ill people appear to have.
My Mom died a bad death! Two weeks after major surgery she died an agonizing death from septicemia We could see the gangrene spread…. She was burning up with fever and no amount of pain medication could dull or relieve the pain. God alone knows what went through her mind because she was ventilated. When my Mom finally died we were so relieved. We were relieved that her suffering was over. We were traumatized by the dying process not her death.
As a family we have lived with Vic’s pain and her excruciatingly slow journey towards death for the past eleven years. For eleven years we have heard her scream with pain, moan with discomfort, we hold her hair back when she is doubled up over a toilet bowel, vomiting until she fractures a vertebrae. We have nursed open wounds, changed colostomy bags…. We have watched our daughter and mother suffer the most horrendous symptoms.
So baby, if you read this post, know that we will miss you. We don’t want you to leave us behind but we want your suffering to end. We will continue to love you until we are reunited one day. You have to trust us that you will always be “my baby” and the boys’ mummy. But know that we will be grateful when your little body is freed from its pain and suffering. You will be at peace… You will not suffer more pain after death. We will mourn you but we will also be at peace… We will think of you and smile…
He eased his body onto the mattress while pulling up the covers and rested his head on the pillow. There are far too many memories of his selfishness, but he will not deny them; he will learn from them. That is both his prayer and his hope. Mercifully, the memories were not all bad. He smiled as another one surfaced.http://thresholdofheaven.com/2012/09/27/now-i-lay-me-down-to-sleep/
This is an extract from a blog of a father’s journey after the death of his young son. Like all parents he is wracked by feelings of guilt and inadequacy.
Shortly after her third birthday Vic developed a bad cold. Her nose was running and I asked her to go wipe her it. She looked at me and in her most defiant tone of voice said “No! I won’t”. I gave her a light smack on her bum. She moved her little arm in front of her bum in an attempt to stop me … three of my fingers struck her arm. She screamed! I immediately knew I had broken her arm…
The x-rays showed that the ulna was broken in three places…. Imagine my horror, guilt, feelings of inadequacy and self-doubt!
I worked hard as a young mother. I was young, divorced, a single parent climbing the corporate ladder. My child had been diagnosed with Osteogenesis Imperfecta (brittle bone disease) and I needed a lot of money to keep Vicky alive and living a fair life. She attended a private school. Did I neglect her at times as a child? Yes, I am sure I did. Not because I wanted too but because I had to work extra hard for that bonus or the next promotion!
Did I abuse her as a child? Absolutely not! My neighbors and some emergency rooms did however think I did… By her 3rd birthday she had had 40 fractures…
When Vic was a little girl there was no internet and Osteogenesis Imperfecta was a “new and extremely rare” disease. I spend many hours, days, weeks even months researching OI in libraries. I went from doctor to doctor. I tried alternative medicine, physiotherapy and hormone treatment! I have spent thousands of hours on the internet researching every single medical report, diagnoses, blood test result that Vic has ever received. I have bullied doctors, nurses and anyone who ever dared cross our path. An ICU sister once told me I am a control freak and that I feed off Vic’s illness!
I can however honestly say that I did my best. I cannot apologize for the mistakes I made as a mother as, at the time, whatever decision I made, I thought it was in Vic’s best interest.
Am I special? Absolutely not! I only do what any other mother would do under the same circumstances. I cringe when people say “oh you are so brave” or “Oh you are so special” or “What an exceptional mother you are. Vicky is lucky to have you as a mother”. Nothing could be further removed from the truth… I am the one blessed with an incredibly brave, compassionate, brilliant child! Vic has enriched my life so much! If I could choose a life with a healthy (different) child where I could have a life of my own, I would not. Vic is part of my journey.
I come from a long line of very good mothers…My Mom taught us the values of being a “family”, honesty, unconditional love, caring and nurturing… I am surrounded by good mothers. Vic is a good mother to her sons. Esther, Lelani and Michaela are good mothers to their children! All my grandchildren have good mothers.
Mothers love the way love is needed. If the child needs caring they get caring, if they need nursing they are nursed. A mother’s love is love in its purest form.
When Vic was 10 years old she lied to me about a school test. It was not the first time she had fibbed and I knew I had to punish her. Lying is an unforgivable transgression! I always told Vicky that it is better to face my wrath for 5 minutes than to lie to me and destroy the trust that we had forever. If she lied I would ALWAYS doubt her…Remembering the broken arm episode and knowing that she knew that I was a pacifist at heart, I decided the worst punishment I could give her would be a smack on her bottom. I made her lie on her bed, on top of her arms, and gave her three smacks with my slipper. (It sounds so barbaric!)
She smirked “It did not hurt at all” and I sobbed….
I phoned my Mom and sobbed “I am such a failure. I am such a lousy Mother! My child is lying to me. I failed as a mother AND I GAVE HER A HIDING!”
Mom quietly asked me “What can you do to be a better Mom?”
I replied “Nothing! I don’t know what else to do! That is why I am phoning you! I need guidance and advice! Please tell me what to do!”
My Mom gently replied “You can never do better than your best!”
These wise words have remained with me all my life.
Andrew, (http://lymphomajourney.wordpress.com ), suffers from mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). Andrew says “I am a husband, father of a teenage son and daughter, brother, a Canadian government executive with a wide range of international and domestic experience, who likes reading, film, music, walking, cycling, skating, being with family and friends.” Andrew is a phenomenal source of information. I sometimes think he has a full-time research team constantly researching all aspects of lymphoma and terminal illness. I often refer back to his blog. Please take time to visit his blog.
Andrew posted this earlier today. You may know that palliative care is my favorite hobbyhorse. I have fought for my child to have a “good death”. Thank you Andrew for sharing this article with us!
A grandfather-father-husband-salesman-cook-gardener-hiker-gentleman, adored by many, is struck down by cancer. His disease is particularly horrible, spreading quickly though his body causing damage not only to bone and organ, but to sinew and nerve. He suffers terrible pain for weeks, relieved poorly with inadequate doses of inferior medications, thrashing in misery witnessed by his kin, always at the bedside, ages seven to seventy. Finally, uncomfortable and agitated until the end, he dies. Does his pain continue after death?
Pain that is not relieved in a person’s life continues after they are gone, held as a sordid memory by loved ones. Just as we retain treasured thoughts of joy, wisdom and warmth, we preserve images of pain. Unrequited suffering contaminates memory, preventing healing, healthy grieving and closure. This pain in turn flows across our communities, touching many who may never have met the patient.
This does not have to be somatic discomfort to be treated with pain medication. Shortness of breath, seizures, nausea, wounds and bleeding cast intense images that last more than one lifetime. Uncontrolled anxiety or fear may contaminate a family and corrupt its fiber, as can loss of spiritual path, loneliness, or guilt. Failure to settle past wrongs or mixed intentions results in a loss of opportunity, a psychic wound that will never heal.
A poorly managed end-of-life experience can transform families for generations. I recently heard of a young man who suffered a miserable protracted death from cancer. This resulted in his wife becoming chronically depressed and isolated from her family. She committed suicide, leaving their son a life as an alcoholic and drug addict. The ripples from that one cancer spread out and, through the network of that family, caused pain for many more.
When we think of end-of-life planning, we focus on those immediate moments for the patient and family, as well we should. The opportunity to live one’s life well, even at its end, should not be denied, and must be the first goal of palliative medicine and hospice. However, we cannot overstate the need and potential to protect and even nourish future generations by treating pain of all types in patients with terminal illness, and in families sharing that passage.
There is pain after death, and I suspect it is the cause of much waste, anger and tragedy in our society. We must strive to prevent that suffering. Good things are possible, loved ones can be together, memories shared, and solid foundations laid. Patients, families, doctors and caregivers must protect and treasure even this difficult time of a person’s life, because as one life ends, others are beginning. http://sunriserounds.com/?p=920
Jared sent me the lyrics of this song. I walked to his room and said “These are beautiful lyrics Angel.”
“I think this is how Mom must feel Oumie” he said….
It’s Not My Time Lyric – 3 Doors Down
Looking back at the beginning of this And how life was Just you and me and love and all of our friends Living life like an ocean
But now the current’s only pulling me down It’s getting harder to breathe It won’t be too long and I’ll be going under Can you save me from this?
‘Cause it’s not my time, I’m not going There’s a fear in me and it’s not showing This could be the end of me And everything I know, ooh, but I won’t go
I look ahead to all the plans that we made And the dreams that we had I’m in a world that tries to take them away Oh, but I’m taking them back
‘Cause all this time I’ve just been too blind to understand What should matter to me My friend, this life we live, it’s not what we have It’s what we believe in
It’s not my time, I’m not going There’s a fear in me, it’s not showing This could be the end of me And everything I know
But it’s not my time, I’m not going There’s a will in me and now I know that This could be the end of me And everything I know, ooh, but I won’t go! I won’t go!
There might be more than you believe (There might be more than you believe) And there might be more than you can see
But it’s not my time, I’m not going There’s a fear in me, it’s not showing This could be the end of me And everything I know
But it’s not my time, I’m not going There’s a will in me and now it’s gonna show This could be the end of me And everything I know
There might be more than you believe (There might be more than you believe) And there might be more than you can see But I won’t go, oh no I won’t go down, yeah
For true love is inexhaustible; the more you give, the more you have. And if you go to draw at the true fountainhead, the more water you draw, the more abundant is its flow.Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Love entails profound care for another person. Love is boundless. “One can never love too much….”
No! That is not true. Loving too much is as scary as lovelessness.
It is hard to see how positive care can be criticized. Even normal cases of romantic love tend to create a narrow temporal perspective that focuses on the beloved and is often oblivious to other considerations. In a romantic love situation loving too much means that one person in the relationship’s love is not returned in equal measures creating an unhealthy in balance.. Profound romantic love is not in its nature excessively wrong; but some cases of such love have a greater chance of being so.
With regard to parental love, some might claim that loving a child too much could be harmful as it can spoil the child. Others might argue that the problem here is not in loving the child too much, but in not understanding what is good for her in the short and long term. To this one might respond that it is precisely the nature of intense emotions not to realize the genuine nature of the given circumstances.
When a child is ill the balance of love becomes severely disturbed.
So I am actually going to rephrase the question – Can a caregiver “care too much?” My answer to that: Perhaps not emotionally — hearts are pretty boundless — but in practical terms, definitely, yes. It is possible to do too much for the person you look after.
Obviously, aging and ill members of family require different levels of assistance. Providing help is often the only humane thing we can do for our loved ones. I have researched this and discovered that sometimes well-intentioned caregivers overdo the role without realizing it.
The rest of your life suffers: A spouse grows resentful and distant, you’re less attentive or fall behind at work, your child feels neglected and your friends think you’ve dropped off the planet.
Your sick loved one, on whose behalf you’re working so tirelessly, is also negatively affected. He or she may feel resentment over what’s perceived as invasiveness, may become depressed over a lack of control in his or her life, or may develop “learned helplessness” and mental and physical skills suffer from lack of practice.
How do you know when you’ve crossed the line from good intentions to brink-of-backfiring?
You handle all the details of the person’s life so effectively that they complain of having “nothing to do.” Vic for a long time said “Mom I can do my own tablets…. I said “No baby, it is fine. Let me do it!”
You’re regularly in doctors’ offices – but they’re the doctors of your loved one. You can’t remember the last time you had a check-up of your own. True!
You can’t remember the last time you took a “day off” — that is a day in which you left the house, left your everyday life, and did not do the majority of caregiving yourself. Guilty!
Caregiving is pretty much your main hobby. Not by choice!
You prepare all the meals, even though the person could do some of the prep work or cooking – even if it took longer or wasn’t done quite the way you’d prefer. Vic prefers my cooking.
You’ll drop everything to take a call from your ill loved one multiple times a day and then resist bringing the conversation to a close once you realize it’s not an emergency. Guilty, Guilty, Guilty!!
You have more fixed appointments in your weekly calendar for the person you take care of than just for you –i.e. no lunch dates, standing walks with a friend, visits to a gym. True!
You offer to do things for others reflexively — but you’d really never think of asking someone to do something very specific for you. Absolutely!
You cater to the person’s special diet needs (low salt, for example) but don’t pay any special attention to your own nutrition. Maybe…Ok guilty!
The last time you took a vacation was a long, long time ago!. Innocent!!! I went to England for a week in May 2012
A friend or relative slips and calls you a “control freak.” So? I don’t have a problem with it. Vic is my child and I know best. I love her more than any other person in the world loves her and only have her best interest at heart!
So what? I am guilty as is many, many other caregivers in my situation. We love so much that we want to protect, nurture and control. By caring we think we may extend our loved one’s life.
Tonight Vic showed me a birthday card that I gave her on the 31stof August 2002. In the February of 2002 Vic had her blotched back surgery that triggered 80 abdominal surgeries and years of pain, indignity and unbearable suffering…
I wrote “You are so special. You are brave, strong, resilient and caring. I love you so much! Baby, from now on we are moving forward. The end of all of this is in sight. Remain focused and continue to fight. I know things are getting better!”
3 October 2012 I would write: “You are so special. You have been brave, strong, resilient and caring all your life. I love you so much! Baby, from now on we are living one day at a time. The end is in sight. I am sorry I held you back for so many years. I am so sorry for the pain I have allowed you to suffer and endure seeking a cure. Know whatever I did was done in the name of love. Please forgive me. It is okay to let go now. Go in peace my beloved child. I love you more than life!”
So, in conclusion I must admit to myself, I have loved Vic with an obsessive, possessive all-consuming love all her life. From the first time she moved in my belly I loved her. When she wrapped her tiny fingers around mine I was lost…. I love you too much, child of mine, now and forever!
Vic had a good day. She had a visit from Willemien, a pharmacist friend of Esther. She soaked in her sons’ presence…
This evening she asked if she could have her injection a little earlier. Jared is going back to theatre tomorrow morning to have his stent removed. “Mommy, I need to try and sleep so I can be with my son tomorrow”
It is as if her wish triggered an avalanche of events.
Vic has been projectile vomiting since and the perspiration is pouring off her. Her heart is racing and her blood pressure is all over. Her abdomen is so distended and extremely tender on the abscess side!
Vic will not be at her son’s side tomorrow when he is readmitted to hospital.
I sense a loneliness of the heart in Vic. I cannot imagine what it feels like to be aware of the fact that you are facing your last months of life, planning your funeral….No matter what we do or say – this is Vic’s journey.
Despite the fact that Vic has known for a long time that she will not die from old age the grim reality of Hospice involvement has forced Vic to come to terms with many losses.
“I still can’t believe it’s going to happen. I thought I had more time. I’m tired but I don’t feel that bad. I just feel like such a burden! I am so worried about how you will cope Mommy. We have always been so close….” Vic lamented this past week.
I am told that Vic is expressing many normal emotions that occur near the end of life. She is feeling the shock of how final death is and the guilt of being a burden on the family. Vic is also concerned about her family she will leave behind….
Knowing that death is imminent is takings its emotional toll on all of us
Vic said tonight that she has never been more scared in her entire life. She is scared of being “isolated” from us. She fears that we will not cope. She is so scared of the pain. She is so scared of leaving the boys behind….
I blogged on Vic’s fears before. https://tersiaburger.com/2012/07/01/vics-fears-2-7-2012 That blog was based on some research and actual observations. Now the fears have intensified and are more real than ever. The situation has changed so much in the past three months. For the worse!
The good thing is that Vic is actually sharing her fears with me. Tonight we prayed over her fears. Vic, at last, is dealing with her fears.
Vic is not ready to die. I am certain that very few people actually ever feel ready to die. I have read that it is perfectly normal to feel angry about life being cut short — it’s unfair and you have a right to be mad! Unfortunately, anger often gets directed at those closest to us, the ones we love the most. We feel safe with these people and know they will probably accept our anger and forgive us for it. Vic over the past couple of months has lashed out at the boys and I.
Vic is now channelling her anger as a source of energy to help her take action where it’s needed. She is telling us, her family, things she really wants us to know. Vic has re-channelled her anger to do meaningful and positive things.
Vic feels guilty about being a burden on us. She also feels guilty that she will be leaving her children behind. Tonight she told me that she felt guilty for distracting me whilst I was driving, 32 years ago, and we were involved in an accident! I told her that I felt guilty for yelling at her when she was 4 years old. Until my dying day I will always remember the fear and confusion in her dark brown eyes….
Worrying endlessly about these long-gone things won’t make it feel better about them. It won’t ease the burden we are carrying. It won’t make us feel better. It won’t make Vic live longer…
We spoke and I told Vic that we simply have to let things go. We cannot change the past. We must fix what can be fixed and try to let go of the things that cannot be changed.
Vic is stressed that Jon-Daniel and she have drifted apart. He is angry with the situation. She wants to spend time with him to rebuild their relationship.
Vic is no longer looking ahead to a seemingly “endless” future. She has lost so many things already. The strength to get around like she used to, the ability to get together with friends….. Vic feels distanced from friends who cannot handle the fact that she is going to die soon.
Vic has had many physical and emotional losses which have come before the loss of life itself. Yet she has gained some things too. She is seeking spiritual peace, a new relationship with her God.
Hospice has given Vic Azor for the anxiety. I believe that the drug is allowing Vic the calmness to seek spiritual peace and closure. She is getting her life in order. Over the years we discussed death as a natural extension of life…. Now she is discussing her funeral with me. Psalm 23 ans 1 Cor 13 will be the readings… What I will dress her in… Her pallbearers…
I sense a loneliness of the heart in Vic. I cannot imagine what it feels like to be aware of the fact that you are facing your last months of life, planning your funeral….No matter what we do or say – this is Vic’s journey.
I remember how I cried when I watched the movie Passion of Christ and saw Mary having to stand by, helplessly, whilst her son suffered carrying The Cross… She had to stand by and watch Him die the cruelest of cruel deaths…
Tonight Vic prayed “Dear Lord Jesus, we have not been friends for a long time. Yet I have come to you tonight to ask You to put Your arms around my children and to protect them…”