Melora
Disney Dreaming
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2003
- Messages
- 2,555
Please forgive my ramblings.. all of this talk today about mothers has sent me into a crying jag and I just needed to write about my mom who I lost to Parkinsons Disease on Feb 1st of this year...
On Christmas Day last year my mom came out of her room.. probably only about the 4th time since we moved in here. She ate at the dining room table with us and sat for 3 hours and looked at photo albums and talked about happy times and dogs she had and my dad and how much she missed him. (He has been gone since 1991). She hadn't been this strong in over a year. She thanked me several times for making the day so nice for her. When she went back into her room that Christmas night she never came out again until she was carried out on Feb 1st.
I do not know how she got the strength to spend that last Christmas with the family. It seemed like it took so much out of her that over the next month she just deteriorated daily.
I was so busy that next month, and she was so weak and unable to talk or hold her head up that I didnt make it into to see her nearly as often as I should of. Sometimes skipping a few days altogether.
I promised myself that I would not be hard on myself after she died, that I would remember that I had done my best. But now, as I look back, I wish so much I had gone in just to sit with her more than just a couple of times a week. Just to watch TV with her. Just to talk to her even if she couldnt talk back to me. I know she wanted to see me more. I know she wanted to hear me say that I loved her over and over again.
No matter how life gets in the way.. no matter how strained your relationship is.. please please take the time to make peace with your loved ones. No matter how much time you think there is, or how the relationship is beyond repair, time is a thief that robs you of what could be and no relationship will ever be hurt by saying I'm sorry or I love you one more time.
Even if the other person may not seem to care, you will know in your heart that you are doing the right thing. And when they are gone you will have peace knowing you did your best.
Here is the last picture I took of my mom on Christmas Day, with Sarah and Josie, her live in caretaker. Josie insisted I take the picture and now I am so glad that I did.
On Christmas Day last year my mom came out of her room.. probably only about the 4th time since we moved in here. She ate at the dining room table with us and sat for 3 hours and looked at photo albums and talked about happy times and dogs she had and my dad and how much she missed him. (He has been gone since 1991). She hadn't been this strong in over a year. She thanked me several times for making the day so nice for her. When she went back into her room that Christmas night she never came out again until she was carried out on Feb 1st.



I do not know how she got the strength to spend that last Christmas with the family. It seemed like it took so much out of her that over the next month she just deteriorated daily.
I was so busy that next month, and she was so weak and unable to talk or hold her head up that I didnt make it into to see her nearly as often as I should of. Sometimes skipping a few days altogether.
I promised myself that I would not be hard on myself after she died, that I would remember that I had done my best. But now, as I look back, I wish so much I had gone in just to sit with her more than just a couple of times a week. Just to watch TV with her. Just to talk to her even if she couldnt talk back to me. I know she wanted to see me more. I know she wanted to hear me say that I loved her over and over again.
No matter how life gets in the way.. no matter how strained your relationship is.. please please take the time to make peace with your loved ones. No matter how much time you think there is, or how the relationship is beyond repair, time is a thief that robs you of what could be and no relationship will ever be hurt by saying I'm sorry or I love you one more time.
Even if the other person may not seem to care, you will know in your heart that you are doing the right thing. And when they are gone you will have peace knowing you did your best.
Here is the last picture I took of my mom on Christmas Day, with Sarah and Josie, her live in caretaker. Josie insisted I take the picture and now I am so glad that I did.
