Sunday, February 16, 2014

Lamentation of a mother



One year ago on this date,
George was alive and miserable in his bedroom in our home.  
Today, I am alive and miserable remembering each day last year, even though much of it has become a blur.
Anticipation, not filled with hope, but with dread. 
Little did I know then, that in less than two weeks, our beloved son would be dead.

Oh, he had told us in no uncertain terms that he was NOT going to live in the state that MS had placed him.  That he would not want to live to continue to deteriorate, become more dependent, lose more function, remain isolated from all that made him who he was; children, a loving woman, work, physical strength, friends......PURPOSE.

Now, he saw himself as an imposition on two aging parents, dependent on a caretaker to wash and assist him in his most intimate functions.  He saw a man who would never have a woman hold him intimately, care for him as a husband, share all his life with him.  He saw no future hope in all the drugs being touted by the pharmaceutical companies and the MS Society.  He saw that he could not live with his four children, guide them, play with them, understand and participate with their changes and maturing.  

He envisioned nothing but pain, deterioration and dependency.  
"This is NOT who I am, Mom, and you know it". Yes, I knew it and understood his every word.

Now, I am a shell of who I was.
I walk, talk, smile, socialize.
I knew that I loved George.
I knew that we had a special bond.
I was willing to care for him for the rest of my life.
I never really knew how much I really loved him.
I never fully comprehended how much I would miss him.

The world expects that I move forward.
That I remember all the good times and find peace that George is no longer suffering.
It doesn't work that way.  I have sat all this month remembering the terrible February last year when he suffered, realized his life would never get better and knew that the future held only more pain, suffering, loneliness and decline.
He worried about us caring for him.  He didn't want any more ambulance rides, hospital visits, fighting for doctors to help him, sadness over his loss of love and friendships.

I can't explain how the light has gone out of my life.  I try to be uplifted with love for my grandchildren, but then I am so sad that they are growing and becoming so wonderful and beautiful and George is not here to see them.
Nothing makes me really happy.  I smile and participate, resemble the old me, but still feel like a ghost.  I am the ghost, lost in this world and wanting my son to be with me.  

I don't know if I will ever recover, find meaning in this life.  Look forward to anything.  I cry when I think of George's kids, their lives going on and he is not with them. Sadness prevails, and no matter how good my fake face is, I am not there.


Just like George is not here or there.  I do not see him in the sky or feel him in the night or see him in my dreams.  He is lost, gone.  I do not want to believe that he is reborn to another life, as in reincarnation.  I do not want someone else to have his love, his beauty, his humor.  I am selfish.
I think he is just gone, belonging to the past, no longer any part of this world and not believing that there is another one in which he can exist. I hope I am wrong.


I just want him. 

I just want him.........



  (Photo taken early in George's diagnosis.  Symtomatic, still functioning, but struggling with treatments and adjustments.)

5 comments:

  1. It is simple to see why you miss him so. Looking at that picture. So very simple. And you stare at that picture and wonder why it happened? Why him. But then, something said to me that it isn't only him. There are so very many George's out there that pass and break their mothers' heart. My very dear friend was married to a George. He died when his car hit the tree and then caught on fire...just to seal the deal. But his mother not only buried him but Scott's only other sibling, a younger brother, years before. Both sons taken. I am sure there are plenty of George stories out there. But only one George. I know that too. He was one in a million, a true gentleman. Sometimes you need help, though. At times like these, you might think of reaching out for help, talk to your doctor. If only for a short duration, he can give you something so you don't spiral down any further. I completely get it. I was caught in a spiral when my dad died. A ghost is a perfect explanation of what I had become. But You...have ....still....so much. I think about you often and pray so very much for you. Please don't be offended by my suggestion as I mean it with nothing but intentions of alleviating some of the pain that is evident and seems not to wane.

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  2. Just yesterday I looked for you on this site. I wondered why.
    What can I say? Sigh...you are living in grief..

    My ONLY hope is that you do indeed HEAR/SEE/KNOW George in a special way, the way he is now..in the present..

    Hugs~ Jan

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  3. All I can offer to you on this heartbreaking anniversary is an open heart and a willing ear. Yours is an experience no one should have. Though it may feel like it, it has not completely broken you. You are still managing to share your pain through your words, and, as I have come to learn, sometimes that expression of brokenness is what lifts one and others up. I send you a virtual hug.

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  4. I still think if him often and pray for you daily in hopes that it will become easier in time. George was a beautiful person who got that beauty from his beautiful mom.

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  5. Dear Readers,
    Anne, Jan, Judith, Dscanzo,
    I thank you with all my heart for your understanding, kind words and thoughts.
    George was a very special person because of his good heart and inner compassion.
    He was just born that way. I will continue to miss him and honor his memory through writing about him as well as remembering him within our family. Not a day goes by that we do not speak of him.
    Though my words speak to my grief, I am resilient as he was, and continue to find a new normal each day.
    I must admit, though, that I have lived each day of this year with some moments of sorrow and tears, never ending the day without his face in my inner vision. My dear son......George.

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