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I Want to Talk About the Grieving Process

Different For Everyone... It is long, it is hard and it affects everyone differently. I have lost my parents and friends, but nothing prepares you for losing a child.

It permeates every thought and every action you take. She is my first thought in the morning and my last at night. I struggle to comprehend God's plan in all of this except to say that she suffered, tremendously.

It always stuck in the back of my mind that she might go. That i might actually lose her. My only daughter, actually both of my children, had a very rare disease.

In February 2007, she ended up in a coma in ICU. She had a central nervous system infection and was placed in a drug induced coma. The doctor told me that once the infection had penetrated her central nervous system, that was the beginning of the end. I still could not see that was going to be her demise.

I got the news at work when she had passed.  The old "We regret to inform you call".  I did not even know she was in the hospital. She had collapsed at her residence and her boyfriend of 14 years let he lie for 2 days before getting help. I hate to say murder but that is what we feel like happened. Plain stupidity can't justify this action.

I was in a stupor, in a city far away when I heard. I fell to my knees in sheer disbelief. You are lieing to me, I yelled out. I had the doctor's number in my planner and he confirmed somberly that she had passed. They grieved too as they had taken care of my daughter for a long time.

My rational brain tried to take over. For the first time in many years, I called my exhusband trying to control what I could. I will write the obituary I said because I knew he could not articulate what needed to be said. Ok, but i need it by the end of the day..How in the world do you write something rational in the space of 2 hours plus get plane tickets for the flight home. I want her buried in my plot I told him. I needed to keep her near me. Good, he said. One less thing I have to pay for.

I am having the service during the day. No one is going to come anyway he said...(the place was packed). All i could do is stare at her, memorizing everything about her face. And all i wanted to do was touch her. Tell her over and over again how much I loved her. I stayed by her side until it was time to lower the coffin lid and i could not bear to see that happen.

The funeral was a blur to me. Mean things were said that were totally inappropriate at the time. Anger welled up inside me. I was a spectator not an active participant at my own daughter's funeral.

It was the aftermath that got me. I cycled through the 5 stages of grief over and over. I was in grief counselling for 9 months. I could not stop crying. I had to bargain with myself to get out of bed. If you write out 5 thank you notes, you can sleep another hour I told myself.  My work saved me. Not the people, the patterns of my job.

I lashed out at anyone who came near me. I did bizarre things. I thought i had lost my sanity. AND I wanted to die. I begged God to take me. I didn't want to live. pure and simple.

To this day, and it will be 6 years soon, I still grieve. I miss her every single moment.
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BigAsset
a tight hug to you. words are never enough to express a loss like this. am sure your daughter knew how much you loved her. always think of your best moments with her and she will be with there with you all the time....
akindheart · 61-69, F
this brings tears to my eyes. thank you!
BigAsset
warm tight hugs...