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Thank you for your concern everyone. I have a sinus infection that wasn't helped by the antibiotic for my infected tooth. A change in medicine should help that.
Everything here is quiet. My brother finished clearing out the apt. today and the task is over for him and he is relieved. We will wait for the death certificate now and I will take care of mother's Christmas cards (repackage and send with a note of her passing) and write the obit. I'll contact the school or the grange to see if they are available for a celebration of life. Her pastor wanted us to have a funeral at the church, but mother wanted us all to go out to dinner and have fun. I'm still not sure the plans are settled, but with the holidays, it's hard to know if things will work out or not.
I am continuing to grieve and my poor Aunt is beside herself. My mother married her brother in 1941. We have spent every holiday together all those years, except I didn't join until later, of course. We will get through this.
I reflect on all of you and your expressions of concern and caring. I feel truly blessed you took an interest and made the effort to help me. Without this community I would have suffered and blundered far more. Thank you. I hope I can repay the kindness I found here.
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I just wanted to thank everyone who has been posting on this thread. Twinflower, it's been amazing to see how strong and compassionate you are. Just by sharing, you are helping so many people. Thanks and God Bless You!
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Does anyone know of a book that I could send my friend whose mother is expected to die fairly soon? She is the caregiver, tired and sad.
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I have two books that have been recommended to me: Final Gifts by Maggie Callanan and Patricia Kelley and Losing Your Parents and Finding Yourself by Victoria Secunda. You could look at the ratings and descriptions of them on Amazon to see if either might be helpful to your friend. They're both highly rated.
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I'm not sure I'd send a book. I think I'd send her something I was sure she would like - a really beautiful scarf, some heavenly bath oil, her favourite sweets, some Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee, that kind of thing - that would be just for her, not to share, so that she'd know that she is cared for too. Of course that might be a book - it depends what your friend likes best.

The trouble with books, or music too, is that it's very hard to get the message right for all the different emotions your friend is bound to be going through at this time. Get it right and it can be really supportive, but what if something grates on her?
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I just thought I'd check back in. I came home from Mother's Celebration of Life yesterday and had no one to share the experience with. It was hard. I emailed my cousin in Florida who is a teacher and couldn't make the trip. My nephew and his wife and young son were able to come from Texas and are staying with my brother. My brother's estranged daughter and her grown son came and I barely got to say hi. They were all getting reacquainted...brother and sister, father and daughter Grandfather and grandson.
I approached the Grange people in the town we lived in when my father was killed. It's a very tight knit community and the people in charge were students of my mom. They took over. They advertised, arranged for everything that was needed and made it absolutely perfect. I took mother to the Old-Timer's Picnic there every summer, and it made a difference because they had fresh memories of her.
Yesterday, community members we didn't know dropped off food for the dinner, and old friends stopped by to help. Families that we knew sent a representative to be with us. If our classmates and friends couldn't come, they sent a brother or sister. We had a nice dinner and then told stories. There were people from all parts of my mother's long life. Young mother, school, retirement, travels and camping and Mexico where she spent winters.
I made a two table display of framed pictures (nine, from different eras of her life) and displayed ordinary everyday things that mother did and/or loved. Sewing items, cooking items and a favorite cookbook, and mementos from Mexico. I displayed her college pictures in an album, and albums from different parts of her life, school yearbooks, and books she loved. Then I tried to remember what she said about everything and made the captions quotes. An example, with the tin measuring cup and spoons and the1950's Betty Crocker cookbook: "You can't make a good pie until you're 50 and by the time you're 60 you forget how". There were things her students gave her that she had saved, and her retirement present..a state of the art 1976 Osterizer blender...the beehive...tank of a blender that she used all these years, and I use now.
I had all her scarves in a basket and we asked everyone to take one if they saw something they liked.
I forgot to do a few things that I wanted to do. I forgot to read the comments that were posted online in response to her obituary. I told a story that, today, makes me feel uncomfortable. I thought the entire Celebration of Life was perfect. It couldn't have gone better, we couldn't have had a better feeling of support from the community, and here's the thing. My father's funeral was 54 years ago to the day of mother's Celebration of Life, among the same people who were around us that day long ago. The date was an accident...it was the only weekend my nephew could get vacation and come from Texas. But when I realized it, I realized there was something greater at work here.
The interment is Wednesday. Just the family will gather for dinner and then there will be a ceremony at the church and mother will be interred at their memorial garden.
My brother did a good job of hosting the dinner, and my sister in law helped a little. I was sad that she forgot the family pictures of grandparents, parents and aunts and uncles I had made and she was to find frames for. She promised to make sure the kids (her kids!) got those photos. I was afraid the estranged daughter might not make another appearance and wanted her to have pictures of her father's family. What she did with them was up to her.
The Celebration of Life was a lot of work. But the family gathered and we honored mom, and acknowledged her life, and paid respect.
My brother is selling my mother's house and going back to his home out of state. Aunt is still having a really hard time. She was unable to come due to confusion and her inability to understand what it was all about. Her assisted living facility was locked down for two weeks in a flu outbreak, and then re-opened yesterday and had aunt go to breakfast in the dining room. That change in her schedule threw her into a great deal of confusion. I will try again to bring her to the interment as I know these rituals are very important to her. Thank you for listening. I still grieve, but for me, there was healing around my father's death, and comfort I could see and feel as an adult, that I didn't know was there as a child of ten. We weren't to talk about it then. As for Mom, it was really sad that I couldn't find a whole lot to say that was good. I think she didn't have a clue how to relate to a sensitive daughter.
She could see I was sensitive, but didn't realize how words hurt, how her disapproval robbed me of self-esteem and sent me careening in confusion, and how criticism tore me down and made me feel unworthy to be alive. She loved me and didn't mean for these things to happen. She once said; "I know myself and I would never treat you like that". So there was no where to go in the relationship. I accepted that. And I did my best to care for her and pull my life together. I'm moderately successful, not good at relationships and work on that daily, and I have good things from my mother, mostly vital life skills, like reading, training in how to do things, training in how to work and be efficient, how to be self sufficient and how to be resourceful. I will express these things at her interment.Things I want the family to hear, and to hear myself say. Then I want to let it go.
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TwinFlower, what a beautiful write-up. It sounds like you honored your mom in the best way possible. I'm happy it went so well for you - thanks for letting us know how it went.
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I had it out with my brother during my dad's last days too. We were all very much emotionally charged up and that's why it happened. My dad was passing from lung cancer in the hospital & me & my mom thought hospice was the choice and he (my brother) wanted him to go home to die. My mom did not think she could handle that- if he became very uncomfortable trying to pass-she would have been devasted.

Long story short- we took him to hospice where he lasted not even 24 hrs. We were able to smooth our ruffled feathers enough to all pull together when the end of time was so blantantly imminent. Hospice is a beautiful thing. I will be forever grateful for the kind people who give of themselves in that way. Not only did they allow my father to pass comfortably but they helped us to understand what was going on and soothed our spirits.
I wish you peace.
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Twinflower, do I remember you worrying that people might not come..?! What a celebration of your mother's life, indeed. And good that you're able to reflect on it, and on her, so fully.

Just, please don't say you had no one to share the experience with? I know it's not the same as a physical companion, or someone who also knew her, but if in doubt come here - we're already thinking of you.

For what it's worth, I agree with you that going to the interment is important for your aunt if she's able to manage it. Other way round, I took my mother to my aunt's funeral last week; she was in two minds about it, but I felt that if she didn't go she might later regret it, and I know it meant a lot to my cousin that she was there. This week she's beginning to lose track of who was there and when things happened, but she does remember she said goodbye to her sister. That's what made it the right decision to go, I think.
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one of our local funeral parlors has had to hire bouncers because of fist, knife, and gun altercations. people just sometimes short out when theyre emotionally strained. when my mom died in aug my youngest sister sent me mein kamhf style hate mails for several weeks. i finally told her i just wouldnt fall into it
my dear mother - she died, she died.
oldest sister - she cried , she cried.
youngest sister - she lied , she lied.. lol
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Twinflower, what a sweet, sad story.
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It is a comfort to have you all here. Thank you. I don't know anything about internet stuff, but I really thought I was typing all those words into space and that no one would know I had written because it had been a long time, and I thought you all would have moved on. I'm not very savvy, am I? Ha!
Aunt did go to the interment. I went to see her yesterday to talk to her about it, then came back this morning. She lives 60 miles away, so it was a lot of driving, but she came, and we went to the interment. She sort of forgot what we were doing a few times, and after lunch (we ate as a family at a fancy place) she asked where my mother was and then caught herself. She cried at the interment and my sweet nephew lent her his strength, and when I cried because she was crying, he put his arm around me too.
My sil one upped me as the daughter to the minister (or tried to, the minister knew my mother and me as caregiver for a long time). She presented herself as the daughter and praised her close relationship with my mother and how she valued that as she was not close with her own mother. I just let it go. It was the first time I'd heard that, so it was a surprise. And I offered a hand on her back when she was crying about the loss of "her mother". It really doesn't matter, and I said nothing and will say nothing. But does that explain the intense pressure from her that I felt, and her conviction she could do a better job of caregiving when she wasn't even in the state? From my point of view her reality is not really real. If that makes sense. But it still doesn't matter.
I'm glad my mother is out of pain. I'm glad she is no longer overwhelmed and anxious. I'm glad she doesn't have to figure things out and try to be independent, while being almost wholly dependent, and I'm glad she doesn't have to fight...me, everything that made her uncomfortable, her failing body, eyesight, and constant discomfort. I'm just glad there is peace for her.
I don't know what I will do with myself. But I'm glad you remembered me, and I will not forget you are here, countrymouse. Now to the next chapter. What do you do when your main focus shifts? Right now I want to rest. Aunt still needs attention and I will continue to care for her, she has been a comfort to me, and there isn't a sweeter person on God's earth. Her first thought is always of me or her caregivers. Are we rested, are we OK, is she too much trouble, we need to take care of ourselves first and then if we want we can help her. Without her this journey with my mother would have been unbearable, but she provided the balance and the affirmation. How did I do this for five years? How did I survive? I always thought caregiving my mother would kill me. I truly thought that. But at least for now, I made it. I've had four infections and course after course of anti-biotics since my mother died. My system is still trying to recover, but I think it will be OK. It is such a change to let down from the stress and I have heard of caregivers getting sick and not finding wellness for a year or so. I wonder what is ahead for me, and for all of you. Take good care of yourselves.
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