Follow
Share

My mom died less than a month ago 94 years old renal failure, dementia. I find myself having survivor's guilt. I am at the grocery store buying some comfort food, snacks, etc. and suddenly found myself feeling guilty and thinking how my mother suffered. Do you all have that experience and how do I deal with it? Thanks.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Well, thanks for all these great answers and sharing of these very personal feelings. Yes, I have guilt. Today I thought, maybe I manifested all these things to happen to my mom. But in reflecting back over the past year, I realize that her body was in the dying phase of life. And no matter what I did or didn't do, she would have passed on anyway. What I learned and what I read in some of the posts, is that, yes, the nasty things we say absolutely come back to haunt us. And they are haunting me daily. I am deeply regretful of the mean things I have said to my mom over the years, but especially the last year. I wish I knew what I know now. And, can there be a h*ll worse than realizing what we've done wrong in our lives? I am getting better, and I am seeing things a little more clearly now as I reflect on the last year of my moms life. When you love someone deeply, there's never enough time to be with them. And after they've gone, we wish for just one more day with them. That's how I feel. Just one more day to see my mom and tell her I love her. Lessons learned in life!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I have a question Arleeda and your situation seems similar to mine. My husband has been under hospice care for 9 months. We are nearing the end, I think. I've been grieving for 9 months. Does that mean I will have to do less grieving after he is gone?
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Because to make any person sick (myself) dwelling on it does not serve a good purpose, does it?
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I could drive myself nuts rethinking what I may not have done to perfection in taking care of my late elderly mother or I could hold my head high and say "good job, Llama lover." I chose the later.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Yes for me since my dad passed. Try as I might to remember him when he was well, the images of him suffering come through and depress me.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I honestly think that everyone suffers with "survivors guilt." but I think that is the very normal process of grief. I have told so many people who are dealing with sick relatives to watch their tongues and actions during this time because our actions do come back to haunt us. I found this out at the age of 10 and have never forgotten it! My grandmother had emphysema and lived with us. She drank coffee continuously and would constantly want it "warmed up." One day I remember saying something nasty to her about warming up her coffee and why bother because she would just let it sit and get cold again. She was ticked and yelled never mind she would do it herself. She almost fell due to my 10 year old stupidity.

I am 64 and still live with that moment and how rudely I spoke to her. The things we say, do, and unfortunately think do come back to "haunt us."

When my mother became ill with dementia I cared for her for 8 years and I became very ill with panic and anxiety the final 4 months of her life. I could no longer care for her and she was placed into a nursing home and was dead in one month. I now live with that guilt.

I do find solace in knowing I loved her and I did my absolute best to care for her when she was alive. I had no help from my siblings and my one sibling who lived with us was a hindrance rather than a help and she relished it! So, I have to just let it go and let those who did nothing live with THEIR guilt and continue to believe and know that I worked with all my might to care for her and do it as well as I could!

Caring for an ill person is an act of love. It does not mean that each day will be easy, it does not mean that we will look forward to each new day with a smile on our face and a song in our heart, but we are there and we are giving every ounce of ourselves to make sure they are well cared for....because we love them.

Your parent lived a long life and you were there with her in the end. You have to forgive yourself for anything you feel you did not do "well enough." Pray for guidance. The most important thing you can do at this time is to get busy with your life and do not dwell in the past.

God Bless you as you go through this time of grief!!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

My mother passed one week ago and I too feel this guilt. While grocery shopping I automatically go for the things I think Mom will like, then have to stop myself, I forget for moments that she is no longer with me... My big guilt is because my mom wanted me to set up an appointment with her lawyer to change her will. I kept thinking (hoping) she had time so why hurry, then she declined fast and the lawyer was not able to see her. She confided in me the last day she was conscious what her will changes were and I feel guilty that I was not able to complete her final wish...
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I want to clarify some confusion. "Intubation" is completely different from
a "gastric feeding tube." Intubation keeps your airway open for breathing purposes. A gastric feeding tube goes to your stomach and provides liquid
nourishment. (feeds you)
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

My mother died years ago. I took care of her while working full time to put food on the table and pay the rent. She died in the hospital minutes before I got there and could say good bye. Also growing up, I was lonely and had a tough life (no fault of my parents) and I wasn't always the sweetest daughter although I loved her dearly. The therapist said it was part of growing up. I still carry guilt for those times and for how sick she was at the end. But I can't change what happened. I had to learn to keep going on and to accept I made big mistakes - but I learned from them. I know my mother has forgiven me and loved me. I don't know what else to say except your guilt is normal - it is part of being alive and living.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Arleeda -- You helped me when you mentioned that you refused to have your husband intubated with a gastric feeding tube. Although I vividly recall showing my husband's doctor his final wishes, I had forgotten that on the advice of several friends, I refused the doctor's offer of inserting a gastric feeding tube. You have described the potential side effects well. I believe my refusal to have the tube inserted may be the reason two of his adult children aren't speaking to me. At 86, I am leaving instructions or my children about what I want at the end of my life. In addition to my living will I will put in writing that I do not want to be intubated.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Don't all of us who survive feel guilt? According to our health care directives, when my husband had his stroke I refused the gastric feeding tube. After he died, I felt guilty for all the mean things I had said when he was difficult (due to vascular dementia) and wished I had been kinder. His children cut me off (and we had been married 32 years), but that was because I didn't keep him alive, unable to walk or see, in a nursing home. I can't tell you how grateful I was for the hospice counselor, who told me to go on with my life and not waste it on "woulda-shoulda-coulda." We could all have done more, and didn't. But we could have done a lot less, and didn't.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

merdianav... why? not the place for this. Bloomschool, what you are feeling is so awful and yet so very "normal" when it comes to grief. Give yourself a chance, let the feelings happen, one month in comparison to the decades you spent with your mom is a very small time for recovery. Lean on support groups, online chats, friends and family, they will hold you up when the grief hits you in the knees. I wish you the very best in this difficult process. Stay strong.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

bloomschool--Do you have some vague feeling that perhaps there was something you could have done to prolong your mother's life or to lessen her suffering? Sometimes one discovers later that if a certain approach had been taken or some event under his/her control had been handled differently, the outcome could have been different. For example, my father got a piece of meat stuck in his esophagus one evening and after it became apparent to him he couldn't dislodge it himself, the next morning he asked to be taken to the emergency room. They removed it there, but he also had atrial fibrillation so he had to remain in the hospital until he was put into a nursing home where he went downhill until he died almost a year later. He had had food stuck in his esophagus before but managed to dislodge it soon afterward. I've sometimes wondered if his life would have been different if the meat had been cut into smaller pieces or if I had insisted on taking him to the emergency room right away, but then I realize he was at a point at which his days were numbered and even if everything had gone "perfectly" he probably wouldn't have lived more than a couple months longer--but potentially could have fallen and broken bones if he had remained at home. Therefore, I feel I did the best I could with what I knew at the time, and I let it go at that.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Survivor's guilt, as it is termed, is a fairly specific thing. It is perhaps especially characterised by the peculiar and tormenting dissonance between natural relief (that it wasn't you who died) and horror and pity (that your peers, companions, fellow passengers, fellow prisoners and so on did), leading to an irrational feeling of guilt and responsibility for their fate.

Bloom, it is expected in western societies that parents predecease their children. So while your raw emotions are in turmoil and extremely painful, I'm not sure that approaching what you feel as survivor's guilt is going to be helpful to you. And although I have said it before, and I don't for a second want to discourage you from working through grief by exploring your thoughts and feelings, I still think you're in too much of a hurry. Your loss is very recent.

Perhaps, as with love, rather than strenuously searching for it, it would be kinder to yourself to sit still and wait for understanding to come to you.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report

Serenity Prayer
- Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971)
"God grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time;
enjoying one moment at a time;
accepting hardships as the pathway to peace;
taking, as He did, this sinful world
as it is, not as I would have it;
trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His Will;
that I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy with Him
forever in the next.
Amen."
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

i agree but for your own sake do not eat your guilt or it will bee bad for you ..have you watch my 600 pd life if not you need to a lot of them over weight people was more on emotion than just being to hungry ..so join a group i agree ..
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I have survivor guilt because all three of my husbands died, and in all three cases I made the decision to give the doctors copies of their living wills stating that if they were dying they wanted no extreme medical measures taken. Although my mother left no advance directive and had dementia, I, as her only survivor, made the same request on her behalf, knowing that is what she would have wanted. I know that my guilt feeling is irrational, and pray that it will diminish with time. My father died suddenly, sparing me this decision.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

I have this too and its been almost 6 months since my father passed away. I have to agree with Veronica and this is part of the grief journey. What you are feeling is natural and normal. Please consider joining a support group or talking to a counsellor. Maybe there are some MeetUp groups in your area that will also help with your grief. I think it takes a long time for our minds to come to terms with losing our parents. I know your mom was 94 years old but in our hearts and minds it was never going to be long enough. I too think it should have been me instead of my dad. I'm trying a little bit of everything and anything to keep myself going forward.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

This is a very common feeling and part of the general process of grieving. Is there a grief group you can join. It will help to talk to others in person. Hospices have grief groups that anyone can join even if the loved one was  never a patient. There will be people there at all stages of grieving and it can be helpful to hear how others dealt with similar feelings. You can just sit and listen you don't have to actively participate will you are ready.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter