I have no words Dilla.
I have just read this at work, I have tears rolling down my face.
Your mum sounds like an amazing lady.
If you need anything you know where we are xxx
Thanks Katie. We found out right around the time that you had your procedure done a few months back. I remember thinking about how just after reading about your awful health experiences, my family was about to go through health issues just as yours, hopefully, was ending. It was our first time dealing with health stuff as a family and it was all so new to us.
@dilla
It's hard to lose your mum at any age. It never gets easier. I feel your pain. You need to ensure you grieve properly too. Don't think you need to be strong for your Dad.
It's going to be really tough for your Dad. Something you've already acknowledged...
Also... I think the suddenness of it. Emotionally a massive rollercoaster without a lot of time to process it.
If anything, this is why Streethop exists. A place where strangers who are friends can vent and share, and support one another
He's still going through the process. We all are but he's a bit further behind than my sister and I. My sister and I spent the most time with her and she was never alone during those 4 months since we were always worried something would happen if we even left her alone to get a gallon of milk from the store.
His family came by as well and his brother will be staying about a month. His cousin also came from the UK and despite his stay being a brief one, I think a lot of good came from the stay.
Sorry to hear about your loss. The loss of a mom is the saddest thing. It's like the world drops out from under you. Just have to go through the motions of daily life and let time get you through the grieving period to a less lost state. And it will.
We're starting to get back in to a routine this week. My mom was essentially the office manager for my dad and while my sister and I managed to take care of minor, day to day stuff while my mom was out of office, things have changed and we'll be taking on a lot more responsibility now. I think we'll finally realize just how much she did for the office behind the scenes.
Her funeral was Thursday and it was incredible how many people showed up. My dad's patients showed up because they knew her from their visits. My dad's physician colleagues showed up too. It was not a small event. We figured 100-150 from rough estimates but it very well could've been double that amount.
The happy-sad part of it was I saw several families there that my mom had stopped talking to almost 20 years ago. And they too were crying and not just there to show their faces and say "I was there, I've done enough." It shows that it takes a ton of effort to avoid/ignore someone, especially when you know both of you are wrong and just too proud to admit it and acknowledge it. Same goes for my dad, who had people he had fucked off a long time ago and who still drove 8 hours, round trip, in a day to get to the funeral.
It wasn't just friends; my dad's only brother/sibling flew in from Singapore within two days and made it to the funeral. 12 years since they last met and about 10 years where it was a bitter fight over personal things. It turns out they missed my sister and I, the kids, this whole time. Their shitty feud deprived them of contact with each other's children who were going through much worse during that time. I'll spare the details, though.
I got to meet my cousins on my mom's side too. Not all of them but a good amount of them and there were a lot of good conversations to be had between use about our parents and how their feuds affected us. We all agreed to remain in touch but just the week they were here, we found a lot about our aunts and uncles that we never knew before. It boiled down to our parents having similar issues with each other and their siblings and how the children suffered as a result. It seems to be common knowledge to many other people that "all families have issues" but there's a philosophical aspect to it where how do you know this if you don't even see your family in the first place? Most people still meet with family because they are close by and then regret it afterwards after conflicts arise. But if your family is spread out across three continents and they seldom meet each other, how do learn the dynamics of your family?
Anyway, the weeks was a mix of happiness and sadness, as it should have been. Some days we sat at home and other days we went out to random shops and coffee shops and restaurants. Some discussions were sad and some full of laughter. My mom wasn't the sole topic of discussion either as it turns out I have both a crazy uncle and aunt. I knew this, but because I experienced it when I was much younger and not often, I could appreciate the insanity more as an adult. My uncle proudly stated he shits blood if he's away from home for than ten days and my aunts ate the unopened/uneaten food off a patient's tray in the hallway in the hospital because the hospital canteen was closed.
I don't know how life will be from here on out but one week with family really softened the blow from losing a mom. It could've been worse. For us, at least. For my mom, her disease took her through every side effect and complication the doctors could've imagined. But at least her final gift to us was dissolving the issues between her siblings as well as between family friends. Quite a price to pay for even just a taste of peace and support.