I went to bed late last night finishing up another post, only to wake up at 4 AM this morning, and never really get back to sleep.
It didn't help that I was thinking about my mother, the news of her passing, and the inevitable thoughts, I suppose, that I missed her and was going to keep on missing her, wouldn't see her again in this life, and that I could have done a better job of keeping in touch.
So, I got up at just before 5:30 AM and came into my office so I could let my wife sleep without possibly being awakened by me trying not to weep and not being very successful at it.
She keeps asking me if I'm okay. Her own mother passed away several years ago, in the same year that both my grandmothers did, so she's concerned because she knows how it feels. She didn't do very well for quite a long time after that, and the memory of her mother is still enough to bring her to tears.
The Albrethsen Family—roughly 40 years and close to (for me, anyway) 140 pounds ago.
I don't know if I'm okay or not. I think I am. Maybe I'm not. It's not so much a numbness at this stage, as it's a swirl of different emotions that tend to hit all at once.
Disbelief. Grief. Relief. What's with the -iefs, anyway? Okay, there is some regret, so that doesn't end in ief. And I don't know if it's really full blown regret. I know what I could have done, and it's not really much more than I did, and I don't know if it would have really been that impactful on Mom.
Not with the way her mind was basically going. She didn't seem to know where she was or why, or that she might even be dying. She still knew who we all were, but she seemed stuck in time, or in her own reality.
As I was talking with my youngest sister yesterday, maybe that was a good thing for her, not really being aware. I was told she was put on antidepressants after going into the nursing home a year ago, so someone at least thought she was heading into dark territory. There is quite a bit about recovering from illness or injury that is wrapped up in attitude and desire, so maintaining a level of positivity would be good.
But something started stealing her mind. I don't know what the cause was, and so am not looking for something to blame. I just know that of it all, the physical decline was not the worst of this. It was seeing her mind go.
Mom is the family historian. She kept the stories straight, even if you were there and were absolutely sure you knew what happened. Nope. Mom always had some other bit of information, or some tweak to the story that you didn't know.
She, of course, knew about people you didn't even know, but supposedly crossed paths with in the ancient past. Usually a relative that had a name but little else to go by in your own memory.
She enjoyed doing family history, or genealogy. She would go to family reunions, and if she and Dad were traveling somewhere, they would probably stop and check on some kind of census record or hit a cemetery or two. This of course was before the age of the internet and her own health beginning to decline.
As I think of it, physically, the decline began well over a decade ago. She was using a walker back when my boys were in high school. She came to one of the football games, so that's been 10-15 years ago. She never ended up walking on her own again. She didn't want to do a lot of the therapy she was supposed to because of the pain she felt or some other reason. She wasn't much into exercising to begin with, as far as I know, which didn't help matters, I'm sure.
She hasn't made a home cooked meal in ages, but among the things I'm finding I miss the most about her are the memories of her homemade chicken and noodles, chicken and dumplings, pizza and hamburgers.
I'm also remembering the absolute glee (though she was generally serious faced when she was doing this, so you had to know her to see the signs), that she would tell my boys about one of my youthful exploits, which generally cast me in some unfortunate light. It was never in a mean way—I think she was trying to keep me from an over inflated sense of self, which admittedly, at times in my life I've had issues with.
Like me scarfing down a whole jar of home canned peaches and a half a loaf of freshly baked bread every afternoon after school, and then eating a full dinner after that. Now, logistically, it was impossible for me to do that every day—there wasn't enough peaches or bread, even if no one else in the family ever got a bite. But it did happen often enough (and maybe any time I could get away with it).
There was the time that I was fresh off my church mission after two years that my sister was driving us home from somewhere and apparently hit the chainlink fence that surrounds the house where my parents have lived for over 45 years. The way my mom tells it, I immediately marched into the house and ratted on her.
I don't remember that at all, and I don't think my younger sister does, either. I'll have to ask.
Just to be funny, I would call it revisionist history, but no one was going to believe me. Not especially the boys, who took their own delight in seeing their dad in some kind of awkward, or human state. It's not like I tried to be superman around them. I was mainly trying to instill in them some sense of responsibility, and since they were boys becoming teenagers, messing around and having fun was generally the top priority.
In retrospect, I could have had a lot more fun with their raising. Hindsight is 20/20 after all. Even so, they managed to turn out pretty good so far—yes, there are days I still have my doubts—and seem to be heading in a good direction.
It's interesting how much you reflect on your own life when thinking about someone who has died. It's amazing how quickly things can seem about you, when they're totally meant to be for them.
I don't know how it could be otherwise. So much of who my mother was became, after our family started, about her husband and children, and somehow ensuring that we had good meals to eat, clothes on our back, and a roof overhead even in the leanest of times. My father made okay money in the jobs he worked, but as I've looked back over the years, there never seemed to be a whole lot of disposable income beyond the bills.
And yet, I never really felt deprived. That's because love was always present, and the absolute essentials were met. And every once in a while, on a birthday or Christmas, some wants would be sneaked in.
My mother, as my Dad reminded me yesterday, took care of the finances for most of their marriage. He would work, bring home the paycheck, and she would find a way to stretch it out each month. We did not live in extravagance, and compared to costs today, it was a pittance, but so would have been my dad's pay. It's all relative.
I only knew we didn't have things like other families did when kids at school would talk about some vacation or expensive toy they got. Otherwise, I was blissfully unaware of what wealth was and I think my sisters were, too. We never went wanting.
I know it took a toll on her. It had to, even though I was never really privy to the conversations she surely had with Dad after we children would go to bed. Through thick and thin, I have handled, and for a long time my wife, too, the finances, and I marvel at how we ever did it with the money I earned. God is good, is all I can say.
My mother was 80 years old, six years younger than her mother when she passed away 13 years ago. I've never done the math before but my grandmother couldn't have been much older than 20 when my mom was born. I was 23 when our first son was born. That seems young enough.
I think I was last of the immediate family to find out. It was my own fault. I'd turned off the ringer on my cell phone for some reason and didn't have it on when my sister called and left a message, saying I needed to call Dad. She almost told me why, but stopped herself.
When I saw the message, an hour had gone by. When I got on the phone with him, I was also being contacted by my daughter-in-law that dinner was ready, and by my boss via text, that he needed something. For hours, before that, no one was trying to get ahold of me. Funny how things like that will happen, and how of little significance eating and work can have in an instant.
When I talked to Dad, he admitted to feeling lost. We all knew she was in hospice, we all knew that meant the end was ever nearing, and that it wasn't likely she would last a year. It had been maybe six months since she was placed under hospice care, and it took me a while to realize that. Dad never really talked about it until I asked him. I guess that might be why he was feeling lost. Even with all the signs, and the knowledge, he wasn't ready for it yet.
I don't think any of us were, or can be. I was hoping to get down to see her some more. I guess she became unresponsive Thursday night sometime. My dad went to see her, and says she was definitely not awake. However, that had happened to one degree or another quite a few times, some of them ending in hospital stays, so he apparently went home thinking that was the case again. He then got a phone call at 5 AM yesterday that she had died a half an hour earlier.
I'm not entirely sure what the cause of death was. She had her back problem, diabetes, the infections that she had to be brought back from the brink a couple of times, advancing age, and as it turns out, a gall bladder that was no longer functioning but could not be removed because of everything else.
At this stage, as I write this and continue to work through the feelings, I'm no longer worried about her. She's in a far better place, without worry or want. Now, I'm concerned about my father, who even though he has been alone for over a year, he had Mom to visit as often as he could. Now he doesn't.
The sister that follows me in age was back living with them, but then ended up in a different rehabilitation facility because of her knees. So, she's not there and couldn't help my Dad even if she wanted to. She needs more help than he can give, which is why my mom was in the home, too.
He's had his own bouts with illnesses. He's kept going because he needed to for everyone else's sake, otherwise, he'd have one of them taking care of him more in all likelihood.
I'm not sure what to do about any of that. He obviously has first say about what he wants to do moving forward. As it is, I think it's one thing at a time, really. The funeral is tentatively set for next Saturday, though it could move depending on what the funeral home says. I guess my Dad will know on Monday. He's supposed to check out nearby cemeteries for a plot in the meantime, and I'm sure there's a ton of other things to attend to that I hope and expect there's someone to aid with that, especially since mom was under hospice care.
He's asked me to do the eulogy. Actually, he used the term obituary. I guess they are more or less one and the same, really. One is spoken and the other is written.
I need to collect some dates, and facts, and not go off my own feelings and recollections. I know how to do it. I spent 15 years of my life publishing smalltown newspapers. I need to find out if there's things she's written down or otherwise recorded about her life, or I'm going to need to talk with Dad and probably her sisters and brother.
I am her son. I should know a lot, right? I do know some things, but I don't as much as I should. She was the storyteller. I was in large part the listener. Unfortunately, my brain hasn't retained probably even a tenth of it. How she could is a testament to who she was. Kind, loving, concerned, smart and with a memory like a whip.
I'm sad she's gone. I'm glad she's not suffering and declining anymore, with no hope of ever going home. At some point, I'll accept the finality of it all, at least in mortality. I do believe we carry on after this life, so I do have a hope of seeing her again eventually, along with everyone else I've known.
That, too, is for another day. Right now, one step at at time is good enough.
There's a lot here. I'm kind of surprised. It took a while to just sit down and get going. When the words finally came, it started flowing, which is good. Even if it's a little more scattered and free form than I tend to do. Maybe I can move on a little now.
And maybe I can use some of this for the eulogy.
Image courtesy of Glen Anthony Albrethsen
I am so very sorry to hear about your mother. Losing one's mother is so profound, I'm not sure there is anything that I can even compare It to. It's so brand new, so fresh, I'm in all that you are even thinking about what you need to do except perhaps to just feel. Everything else can come after this. Just take a moment for yourself. I feel like you might be a little bit too hard on yourself trying to figure out whether it is enough or not. Right after you lose someone is no time to do that because you always come up short no, because that's what we do when we miss someone. We try to think how we could have done more loved more help more, more more more. In fact, if I had to guess, you're probably just perfect.
Having lost my own mom to dementia/Alzheimer's not that long ago, my heart goes out to you.
I keep you and your family are in my thoughts and prayers, especially your dad who is basically just drift and right now so keep him under your care. Let your heart guide you in your writing and your decisions and much love to you and your family. Again my deepest condolences. I just wish I didn't have to give them.
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Hey, @dswigle.
Thank you for the condolences and well-wishes.
I'm finding out here that not feeling isn't working out—I think I have too much of my mom in me for that. :)
So, whether I want to or not, it is mostly emotion right now. I can think of 100 or more things that I or anyone of us involved could have done, and yet, I also know that I don't know all of what took place or could have been done, even my own part of it, so I am trying not to go down the road. As you say, though, coming up short when we're missing someone seems to go hand in hand.
You know what it's like then, and maybe even more so, since I don't even know if my mom was even being diagnosed for the onset of dementia/Alzheimer's, but there was something definitely going on there.
I agree about my dad. I need to find out more about what he needs right now. I wish my younger sister were living there, but that's his and her decisions, not mine. Trying to know when to suggest and when not to is one of the harder things right now.
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Sorry for your loss. It must be a very tough time for all of you. Delivering the eulogy will be hard, but from everything I've seen and heard from and about you - you are the man for the job. No doubt at all.
Look after your Dad. I know you're hurting but he'll be hurting a lot more and if he's like most men he'll be trying not to show it.
All the best.
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Hey, @buggedout.
Thank you for the kind words. It's been an odd combination of emotions hitting all at once, and I seem to be getting through it in fits and starts. I'm not sure if I'm going through the stages one at a time or I'm jumping around and mixing and matching but anyway, it's happening.
I'm trying. Thankfully, my youngest sister and his sister are closer and both of them have been helping out. Which is good, because my dad isn't used to doing a whole lot of planning, I don't think. :)
He's not so much showing the emotion, but the fact that he's even talking about how he feels is more than he's ever really done, so I think that's how he's expressing things right now.
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There's not really a "correct textbook" type way of getting through these sorts of tough times. It's very much a case of "whatever works" I think so just do (and feel) whatever you need to get through it.
I'm glad to hear there is some family around and that your dad is opening up a bit. That's a very healthy thing.
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I went through (almost) the same in 2017.
My mother died just one week before christmas, on december 17. Due to brain tumor. She was 64 years old. This was very quick. It all started at the end of the summer, at the beginning of autumn. At first, she was in hospital for a few months. Then in hospice in another city. I regularly visited her in the hospital, and I brought her food and fruits to her, like bananas, but I could not visit her in hospice. I also have regrets. I wish that I should have been more kind to her, and that I have been spent a lot more time with her. She made everything she could for us (for me and for my brother). She worked throughout her life. Even when she got early pension. She made everything to make our lives good. She deserved much more from this life. This is a hard topic. I have a lot of regrets. I made many (intentional and not intentional) mistakes in my life, but I am trying to be a good person.
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Hey, xplosive.
Thank you very much for sharing.
Your had/have a great mom. We never know when those we love will be taken from us, do we? Nor do we know when it might be our time.
I guess we all come to realizations about what's important and what's not, and sometimes it takes a loss to get there. It sounds to me that you are being a good person. :)
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Not knowing your mom, you painted such a wonderful picture of her here. They say time heals all, and as time passes, fond memories will displace the shock one feels after loosing a parent. Hang in there my friend, your mother is watching and I'm sure you will feel her presence every day, @glenalbrethsen.
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Hey, @thebigsweed.
Thank you. I appreciate all of what you said.
I believe it will. It's just getting through it in the meantime. I'm just trying to take things one step at a time because until I take them, I'm not even sure if I can do the one. Trying to stay in routine is helping some.
Because she is watching, I need to shape up!
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You have some wonderful memories. I'm sorry to hear about your mom passing. Sending hugs and warm wishes
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Hey, @paulag.
Thank you for all of that. I do. Home was always a safe haven because of her, so while my youth could be rocky at times because of others, like most of us I would guess, my mom was always there for me.
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So sorry to hear of your loss. Hang on to "one step at a time is good enough". There's so much wisdom right there.
Sending you and your family much love. 💙
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Hey, @gillianpearce.
Thank you. It's kind of all I can think of to do right now. Go with the flow to some degree. I probably should try to do it just as a matter of course. :)
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Yeah. I find coming back to the present and just doing the next thing works wonders in most situations. When you're sad, feel sad. When your feel like reminiscing, reminisce. When you feel like railing go ahead and rail. Stuff will get done and feelings will come and go. The kindest thing you can do for yourself is to allow it to unfold as it will (just like you did with your writing) and not add any more to your plate right now. There's no right way to deal with the death of a loved one. Just your way. 💙 💙 💙
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Glen, that sucked me in like a tractorbeam. You did very well honoring your mother with your storytelling. Condolences, you'll do amazing at the eulogy no doubt. My thoughts are with you, @glenalbrethsen.
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Hey, @intothewild.
Thank you.
I'm pretty surprised on how it all just kind of came out, but thank you. I'm hoping to get some help from my youngest sister, since she's working on the obituary. Don't need to duplicate efforts, right? :)
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I don't know what to say and so will say what I generally do in these situations...Your mom is no longer where she once was, she is everywhere you go because you carry her with you in your memories.
I lost my mum to cancer in 2004 when she was 59 and so I understand how you may feel, or not feel...It's an odd time and we all handle it differently; It's a journey. All the best to you and your family, I'm sorry for your loss.
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Hey, @galenkp.
Thank you. You've been through a lot with both parents. Thank you for sharing with us.
Odd is pretty dead on as far as how it feels right now for sure. I know she's in a better place, if only because she's not getting worse anymore.
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Thoughts are with you Glen, and the family too.
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I'm so sorry you lost your mom. Age is only a minor 'warning' in a way, we're never really ready/prepared to say goodbye. This is a beautiful post, sharing so many bigger and smaller details of her life and how you relate to her <3 It's beautiful. I'm not sure how you'll feel today, tomorrow, or in a few months, but for now I hope you find strength to get through the first shock and sadness, and you'll be able to share even more stories and memories with all your and her loved ones.
Digital hug from me.
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Hey, @soyrosa.
So very true about not being really prepared to say goodbye, regardless of the age or the signs. I am glad she's no longer suffering, and if my dad can work his way with help from the rest of us through this stage, that will be the main thing for me.
I'm okay, as far as the circumstances will allow. I came to grips a couple months ago that it was going to happen sooner than later. It took me a long time to get to that point, though, in part because I didn't know all the details. Dad kind of spoonfed them, either because he didn't want to say it, or he thought it would be better if I got there on my own. Can't blame him at all if either is the case. He's never been the one relaying information, either. That was mom.
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Yes - your dad will have the hardest blow for now, I truly hope you all can be supportive of each other.
I'm glad to hear you're okay, and whatever comes your way in the form of feelings or maybe even the idea of 'I have peace with it', it's all okay, just take the time to observe/feel whatever there is. Might come soon, might come later than you expect. Sometimes the first time we don't really realize what's happening.
Anyway, stay strong.
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Sorry for your loss. My mother is fighting a serious illness and I just hope everyday that this type of trial is still a long ways off. I hate to think of facing it. Take care of yourself and your family.
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Hey, @bryan-imhoff.
Thank you.
I hope you get your wish and take advantage of the time available.
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So sorry to hear about her passing sir Glen but of course in what will seem like the blink of an eye you'll be together in heaven. It's brutal though and it's tough when they don't have the mental capacity to know what's going on. Very sad indeed and I feel your pain. It's probably good to have a job to keep you busy.
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Hey, @janton.
Thank you for the interest and the kind words. I think staying in routine for now has been good. The fact that the funeral isn't until next week is also helpful, since it was tentatively set for tomorrow, then quickly got moved to a week from today. I'm sure by the time it comes around, I'll wish it were over.
It is sad, but not entirely unexpected, and I do believe we will see each other again, so it's good to have that reaffirmed by you, too.
I think for me the mental part is what gives me the most relief knowing she wasn't going to come out of it and that her quality of life was only going to worsen. It's not really much of a way to live, from what I can see.
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Exactly sir Glen, your last sentence...it was probably best to get out of here when she did because of the downhill spiral. Mrs. J's parents are both in that situation, both have dementia and in a nursing home and there is no quality of life left.
So that part is merciful. I would concentrate on seeing her again in heaven, that will be a joyous reunion!
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My condolences. Stay centered and follow your breathing! Awareness will be helpful.
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Thank you, @kaminchan. Centered and breathing are both good things to keep being and doing. :)
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I'm so sorry, Glen. Let me know if there is anything I can do.
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Hey, @bbrewer.
Thank you. Sorry. I was planning on letting you know more directly. At the moment, I can't think of anything, but I certainly appreciate the offer and if I come up with something, I will let you know. :)
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No worries! Do let me know. Take care friend.
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Oh @glenalbrethsen, I am so sorry for your lose. It's so hard to lose your parents, especially Mom, at least for me it was, I felt kinda lost, like in a strange dream. But I promise you, it may take time but you will smile again when you think of her.
Blessings to you and your family.
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Hey, @farm-mom.
Thank you. It does kind of feel like a dream, or not real anyway. Odd but true. :)
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Oh my friend, I can feel your pain. Take solace in the fact she had a good long life, 80, God Bless her.
She is at peace now, suffering no more.
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Hey Glen. So sorry to hear of your lost. My condolences! Take it easy!
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Hey, Vincent.
Thank you. One step and day at a time. :)
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Indeed. Just don't reproach yourself too much. Don't even go there. It is all pointless and doesn't help anybody, nor do anybody any good.
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It's been a while since I logged on, but I happened to be scrolling through the feed and saw your post. I'm really sorry for your loss. It's never easy to lose someone so close to you, even if you've had time to (supposedly) prepare. My thoughts and prayers go out to you and your family.
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Hey, @themanwithnoname.
Thank you. I'm glad you logged on. It has been a while. I was thinking that it would be nice if a few people did know, and you were one of them, even if we haven't yet met off STEEM.
It's been a rush of different emotions so far. Any little thought or memory will trigger it. All very normal I suppose and not so unique to the human experience other than it's me going through it.
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I started a new job and that has been taking most of my time and energy. I also haven't been a fan of newsteem, but that's another story.
I've lost loved ones and it struck me how it was little things like driving down a certain road I'd been on with them that made me feel the loss most deeply. As life has gone on the acute pain is gone, but I still feel the loss. That's why it's so important to be thankful for what we have while we have it.
I'm glad you're figuring out how to start processing it. It's a journey and there can be steps forward and back, but the important thing is to keep going. And it's ok to be where you're at. Don't push yourself to be ok if you're not ok. That won't help anything. It's ok to be in pain. That's how it heals.
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Hey, have you heard from Lynn or Brian recently?
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I haven't. Lynn's activity on discord has fallen off, too. I used to see her jump on once in a while even if she wasn't on STEEM. That hasn't happened now in quite some time.
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