Among all the hoo-ha of the last eighteen months my mind has been so full of just dealing with the situations I found myself in and trying to cope with them that in a strange way I didn't really have time to think. I'm not sure if that's entirely a bad thing, I suspect in fact it's the reverse and that had I been able to mull over the minutiae to a greater degree it would only have hindered my ability to get on with the matters in hand.
Not much of it was good, most of you who read here regularly already know the timeline, my being unceremoniously ditched by the guy I thought at the time was the love of my life
The whole period was madness, I remember it really as a blur of trying to organise, administer and control umpteen medications, constant hospital visits and procedures, trying to keep everyone 'afloat' and positive, trying to make what time my Dad had left as tolerable as possible for him and of a constant underlying feeling of panic that I wouldn't cope and the obvious sadness that ultimately, whatever we did, the outcome was not going to be good.
I just never had time to think and no sooner had the inevitable happened and my Dad had turned up his toes than I was catapulted into another difficult situation, taking care of my mother and dealing with the fallout.... but today was different.
Today, and I have no idea why it was today, I was driving my white van merrily along the road when seemingly like a bolt from the blue, with tremendous and almost physical force it hit me; my dad is dead, like really dead, like never coming back, absolutely dead and gone. I can remember his face as clear as day, I can hear his voice in my head easily but I won't ever see him again, never, not ever, he really is completely and utterly dead.
Forever. Fin. The End.
I use the stark language that I do because that's how it feels, in my face, real, stark, tangible at last. I don't quite know what I feel about it right now, at the moment it hit me I felt a sadness like I don't ever remember before but it was strangely brief and I'm glad I felt it, it felt real and accepting and has somehow allowed me to suddenly remember in detail things I think I had tried not to think about and buried away.
There is so much stuff, lots of it right now appears to be centered around his last few months of life, but not necessarily sad stuff, just stuff, stuff about the time I spent nursing him and some of the amusing (if sometimes gross) things that happened despite the circumstances, about how that time bought us closer and how we could laugh however desperate the situation became.
I suspect in the near future I may regale you with some of those tales, it's cathartic for me and some are worth sharing for various reasons... but mostly I feel that maybe the real me, who I battened down for so long with such alacrity to enable me to cope with the here and now, is finally emerging again with the acceptance, however difficult, that it's really all over.
My dad is dead. It's real. I have to cope now without him because he's gone and I'm not......
....and he would be as miffed as bloody hell with me if I didn't!
6 Comments:
Another Term for what your feeling would be...coming back to life xx
This Jane, is what is called closure. You have come to the end of a road and will find another track. I am not being slight or disrespectful when I say I had to go through this with a dog. I recognise all the symptoms and know just how much it deadens all ordinary life. All I can say is , you know how to contact me .....quettogr
oh hell, this is what I am going to have to go through in due course. I am dreading it. you are brave and couragous and will cope!
It is indeed closure, and is the natural course of things. After a while, your memories will be of the good times, not the pain of the end time. He is gone from your hearth, but not from your heart.
I know. I have walked the same path - more than once.
{{Hugs}} it isn't easy coming to terms with losing your parent(s) but I found that the good memories far outweighed the pain of the loss and sustained me in my life's journey. I am only glad I don't leave a legacy like that myself. xx
I felt the same way about my mothers death. I think the first little while, your mind is focused somewhat on the dying itself, and part of you is relieved that is happened as well as missing them (my mum was sick for 6 years). Then suddenly, like you it was the finality of it all. Her being gone.
Somewhere after that, I was able to step through and now can only remember the good things about my mum and her life with us, and I seldom will think of her and cry, usually just smile and laugh.
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