My Mom just passed.....

Nurses General Nursing

Published

My mom was Dx with a very large adrenal tumor last June (5x7in), found out in July it was malignant (stage IV) and had metastasized to her lung. Then in August it was decided that she would go on hospice. They didn't feel it was an option to remove the tumor because they explained that the surgery would incapacitate her so bad she would never leave the hospital alive. I broke down and was very emotional for over a week.

She was 71 years old, worked full time until her Dx (she was a 2 pack a day smoker); she became worried when she had lost almost 50 lbs, couldn't eat (she was living on Ensure), and when the pain became so severe she couldn't sleep.

I have only talked to her 2x's, in August and September, then I had to return to school, and as selfish as it sounds, I couldn't call her because I needed to focus on school, myself and my Autistic son (lousy excuse, I know). Now she is dead and I feel like crap. My step sister just called me to tell me.

There is a background and reasons for being this way, (I am not totally heartless). I come from a very large dysfunctional family, mental illness, and alcoholism/addiction plagues both sides (and my step family). My father-mentally ill/recovered alcoholic/addict (now a dry drunk), Dx with Schizophrenia (he thought he was Jesus and tried to walk the water on his and my moms wedding day, and a few years later he slashed his wrists and ran down Hennepin Ave), his parents both alcoholics (mean drunks); my moms father: alcoholic (suspected suicide at age 55: found in the garage with the car running and garage door shut) not a mean drunk. My moms older sister: alcoholic, Dx mental illness (died in her early 60's in a facility from lung cancer). I have seen things that no child should see, or experience (in the 1960's when I was a 3 or 4 year old child and my father took us all to see a car wreck and explained that the stuff on the floor and on the front seat was brains). My parents divorced when I was 5, after my mom received "the clap" from my dad, and suffered a nervous breakdown (6 kids split up and put in foster homes). My mother believed in the "spare the rod, spoil the child" belief; bruises, a bloody noise were not uncommon, especially when she became a single mother of 6 children.

I still loved my mom, even though she was unable to show affection, and the years (5-12 yr. old) between my father and step-father were the most happy times of my childhood.

When I was 12, my mom met my step-father. Very nice in the beginning, and he had 4 daughters around the same ages as us. Cracks in my step-fathers facade appeared within a few months of the marriage. My SF had a mean streak when he was drinking, and would grit his teeth when he yelled, he scared all of us. Anything would set him off. To make things worse he would laugh this weird laugh, but he was not happy. Then fights between my mom and him, huge fights, and we heard how stressed my SF was because he had to take care of us. Then my SF began beating up my older sister. One of my other older sisters tried to commit suicide when she was 14, because she didn't like my SF, but he never laid a finger on her. Time passed and my older sisters moved out, got married and had kids. We moved out to California, and it was there that my SF began abusing me, name calling was his favorite (eg.he called me a ****/wh*** when I was 14, no BF, hadn't even been on a date even), with a few beatings sprinkled in. This went on until I was 16 when he had given me such a beating (it lasted something like 10 minutes), while my mom and little sister watched, that he left me with a black eye and miscellaneous bruising. I went to school the next day and my friends mouths dropped open when they heard what had happened. They dragged me into the Guidance Counselors office, and he tried to get my mom and SF to come in to talk about it. Nothing ever happened and it was not much later I ran away.

I have struggled for years to get my life straight since then (I am 46) without the help of my mom, or anyone (there has been a lot of problems with my siblings/other family members also) and now I for once am taking care of business, appropriately. I take an SSRI to manage my own depression (for the last 5 years) and finally got the ball rolling in a positive direction. I have overcome a lot, and had to learn many things the hard way (who did I have to teach me, but me) and I SURVIVED!

Is it bad that I am avoiding dealing with my moms illness and passing like this. I just need to get through one more semester, graduate, and pass the NCLEX, then I feel like I can grieve. I just can't break down now, I go back to school in 3 days, and we hit the ground running this semester, and I have my little boy to care for.

I also want to add that I have put much of the pain, anger, and resentment I held inside to sleep. I love my family, and I will miss my mom (and the opportunity to share my happiness over my accomplishments with her). I am pushing back tears and emotions as I write this, but I just can't grieve yet. I don't have time.

FYI: I didn't graduate from HS, but got my GED when I was pregnant at 18. So when I graduate in May, this will be the first time I walk for a diploma in a cap and gown (2 diploma's to boot: AA/liberal arts and AS/RN).

Thank You all for your time and any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Oh, Angel....so sorry. You have A LOT of crud you need to deal with. You might want to get into counselling to help you sort all of this out. Take care of you, whatever it takes to do that you need to do. You can heal from this and become a stronger person because of it, but you need to deal with it first. Sending warm wishes your way, dear.....

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

Sending good thoughts for you and your family.

Specializes in Med/Surg, Academics.

Everyone deals with grief differently. I think you feel as if you're not dealing with the passing of your mother, but you ARE grieving! Your grief, I think, is taking the form of guilt over not having contact with your mother over the past few months, and you are re-interpreting it to mean you AREN'T grieving. Not true. You are NOT heartless, otherwise you would have never written what you wrote.

All grief--no matter the form--is valid and necessary. Don't demean yourself over the combination of circumstances that led to your grief--and it *is* grief.

Best wishes to you as you heal.

How could she help not grieving after losing her Mom?

of course she'll be 'grieving'...

all i meant is angel needn't worry about taking time out to 'properly' grieve.

when trauma strikes us, we have built-in mechanisms that allow us to carry out necessary work.

so while angel may be experiencing a variety of emotions, she may also be numb...

and the grieving aspect, will indeed, catch up with her sooner or later.

but for now, and if able, she can keep her mom close to her while 'they' trudge through the nsg together.

yes, i know how hokey-pokey that may sound, but as someone who is extremely spiritual, i have seen this happen quite often...

that they felt their deceased loved ones, with them as they traipsed along.

leslie

Specializes in ORTHOPAEDICS-CERTIFIED SINCE 89.

Oh Angel, I wish I could have Mama back, but only the last 4 or 5 years of her life after she developed dementia. Our numbers are legion in the Nursing profession. I too had a dysfunctional family, Mama more than Daddy. She enabled him and he enabled her. As a result all 3 of their daughters are in caring mode-Nurse, teacher, social worker. And we are all on SSRIs trying to break the mold as it were.

I grieved Mama the most, I believe, because she finally became a loving mother in her last days-she was 90 when she passed. Just pneumonia......nothing cancerous or metabolic, mainly old age. Fortunately my husband came from a normal milleu, loving dad, mom, sisters, cousins and I have had a "real" family through him. Of course he is bull headed, stubborn, but then he's a MAN.

Angel you have full permission to grieve but not to dwell on the bad parts. Just remember that no matter what, you did love your Mama, but don't take on her problems, just recall any happy times and love those.

Hugs from me to you.:flwrhrts:

She knows you loved her, Angel. Be sure of that.

{{{Angel}}}

"My heart is breaking, but I just have to keep shutting it off for right now. It is just not safe to grieve."

I'm not certain what you mean by this, but as devastating as the grief reaction can be, it is most assuredly safe to grieve. You can work and grieve, and be a student and grieve, and be a parent and grieve. It is not safe to not grieve, and it is unwise to keep shutting it off. Grief takes a long time and it becomes integrated with the routine of life. Your grief will touch everything. You can't avoid it so make a friend of it. You will remain functional and you will adapt, adjust and move on exactly when you're supposed to.

+ Add a Comment