Follow
Share

I keep thinking that if I had her living with me she would not have been in the care home and later the hospital to then be neglected in care. She was my best friend, I let her down. I didn't think I could cope full time with her anxiety. I was a coward not to try. I thought if she came and it didn't work out it would be hard to ask her to leave. She died asking me to put a knife in her as she couldn't take any more pain from her twisted bowel. As I said I wrote about it here previously. Now all I think of is she died with a broken heart feeling unwanted and unloved. That is even worse than her physical pain. Every time I saw her she asked why didn't you want me, I would have taken you into my home in a heartbeat.
We were like sisters and best friends. I had no brothers or sisters. I can't forgive myself.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
Coward? You used the word coward to define yourself. We hear words like guilt and grief, but never coward. I would never ever consider a caregiver a coward. But feelings and emotions are personal. No one in this forum can talk you out of how you feel, that would be undermining your feelings. We cannot decide that what you feel is wrong. Many people post of their guilt or regret (which is probably more accurate to say than guilt) especially after the loss of a LO. Do we pick and choose how we want to feel? No, it just comes. It is what it is. Emotions aren't wrong, they just are. If you really do feel like a coward, and I accept that, then your best approach is to seek professional counseling with a psychologist or psychiatrist who is trained in CBT therapy.

Your mom's death was heartbreaking, tragic, unavoidable and for now, inconsolable for you. But her death does not define you. I wish you the strength to overcome your negative emotions and the courage to seek counseling.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Tthankyou. I cant afford councelling. It costs a fortune here and doesn't come through public funding. I try to read alot and my friend talks to me. Mum and I were more like sisters. Unfortunately we were very different. She was shy and no confidence and trusted me for all things. I have always been a control freak. She trusted me . Thanks for your wisdom x
(0)
Report
It is on the hospital that they didn't provide pain relief. That is their job, not yours. And they were in charge. I am so dreadfully sorry for your loss, but it was a loss that comes to us all. That you two shared great love is a wonderful thing, and a gift you gave to one another.
There are two G words we often mix up. One is guilt and the other is grief. Unless you are an evil felon who caused and took great joy in your mother's illness and pain, the word guilt is not for you. The word you want is grief. You are grieving. You could not have prevented a twisted bowel and an obstruction; you aren't god and you aren't a Saint. You are a human being who witnessed the torment of one you loved dying in pain.
Now your Mom's suffering is over. There is no going back. As the Mortician and essayist/poet Thomas Lynch says "The dead DON'T CARE". For them it is over. What honor do you do your poor Mom to call yourself names? How can this help her or help what you went through, what she went through.
Please consider grief counseling to help yourself on with a quality life. Your not "forgiving yourself" infers that you were god and could have changed this. It is grandiose thinking. I am so sorry that you are so stuck in all of this pain. You could not help your Mom, but you CAN help yourself. I wish you great luck, and am so sorry that you continue to have such a dreadful time with your grief when you should now be celebrating the life of your Mom, and the great love you two shared. Please get help. It is so hard to have these last images stuck in our heads and our brain tends to create a habitual path we walk over and over and over until it deepens and draws us. Get help. Please. And again, I remember your first postings to us. I am so sorry that the medical system let you down so badly. THEY are the ones who should be feeling guilt, because they were the ones who had power to change what happened and the way it happened.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Thank you for your wisdom. I think what was worse is Mum had asked me for months....why dont you love me I would have given you a home in a heart beat. I have loved you all your life. I just want to live with my darling daughter and Patchie ( my dog Mum loved) one day She told me when I arrived at her previous room she had been singing to Patchies photo. She was very shy. I had convinced her to go to the rest home. I had said if it didnt work she could always live with me. As my previous messages said I realized later I wouldn't be able to cope with Mums anxiety, but I should have tried. I was a coward and my Mother died feeling unwanted and unloved. Thankyou for caring. Xx
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
I'm sorry for your loss.

BUT!
It was NOT your fault and you did what you felt was best at the time.

Please don't let the last few days of mom's life color the entirety of her being your mom.

I truly believe people, after they've passed, are immediately out of pain and misery that is this life. AND I believe that they have the capacity to forgive anything you've done, or perceived you've done.

Bless you as you naviagte these new waters. You can seek some help to deal with the sorrow and guilt, but you didn't CAUSE your mom to suffer. Nothing about which to feel guilty.

(Hugs))
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Yes but zi did cause her to suffer by not ringing her for 3 days as I needed time out. She had been moved to a new facility and I should have phoned her every day in the new place. I had phoned her every night of our lives. I was tired and thought she would settle in and she didnt have her own phone in her new room. The staff when I had phoned didnt tell me she was I'll. I regret leaving her alone in the new place and not ringing every night and then she went into hospital and I only saw her the first day then it was 5 day covid lick down. Thanks for caring x
(0)
Report
I’m sorry for your pain. How your mother died wasn’t your fault. I hope you’ll seek grief counseling, a group called GriefShare is excellent for helping walk through your experience and start healing
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
THanks. This forum is wonderful also as are you all who answered me. X
(1)
Report
So sorry for your loss. Like said, its not your fault its the fault of the Hospital. No one should be in that amount of pain in a hospital. And I have been at the fighting end with my mother. Knowing something was wrong and staff saying "but she is being discharged". Finally got a Dr to give it one more day then my RN daughter walked in and found that it was the antibiotic, it contained penicillin and Mom was sensitive to it.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Yes so you will know the neglect that can happen. Thank you for caring x
(0)
Report
Twisted bowel is very hard to pick up. Relative had this. Even scans didn't at first find it - under the care of specialist surgeon.

To think you could have prevented this or picked in up while in a home setting, without x-ray or CT scan is not believable. It is grief, anger, denial & wishful thinking.

Speaking to a grief counselor may help accept your loss & find ways to connect to happier memories of your beloved Mother.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Thank you
I know all you say. But there were so many mistakes made. All I hoped was she died in peace feeling loved by me but it didnt happen. X
(0)
Report
When people are in a great deal of pain, they
say irrational things. Your mum loved you dearly, she doesn't want you to dwell on those last days.
If mum didn't survive in a hospital, there's no way you could have saved her.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Thank you. I didnt think I could save her but I wish she knew I loved her when she died x
(0)
Report
Patchie, I am so very sorry for your loss. It hurts when oir moms pass.

But, how on earth, in your 70s and in ill health yourself do you imagine that you would have given your mother better care than she got?

She had lifelong depression and anxiety. She ALWAYS looked at the negative side of things. She thought she was "no trouble" when in fact she needed care.

Twisted bowls are not easy to diagnose. I am glad that your mom was gotten to the hospital, but I am sorry that they were not abke to relieve her pain adequately.

Do you imagine that you would have been able to diagnose her condition better?
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
I think if Mum were with me I would have taken her to a Doctor and she would have at least had me beside her. The rest home only told me 6 days later and then when I read the notes I requested from the hospital the rest home only told the hospital Mum vomited 5 times that day. It was only me getting the notes from the rest home via my lawyer that I read she had been vomiting not eating and I'll for 6 days. Thank you for your support x
(0)
Report
This is not your fault.
It is the fault of EVERY medical professional that allowed her pain to reach such a level that she could not bear it.
That is not just unethical but inhumane.
You had very valid reasons not to have her in your home where you may or may not have been able to care for her.
Your mom would not have wanted you to continue to think this was/is your fault.
((hugs))
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Patchie1 May 2021
Thank you so very very much. I am numb thinking about what my poor little Mum suffered. Worse she passed away and we couldn't talk it through as she was too in pain. Worse to die feeling unwanted even worse than the pain. Thank you for your kindness x
(0)
Report
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter