I just read bits and pieces of the thread, so I may have missed something.
My grandfather passed away about a week ago. He was on kidney dialysis for the past 2 years, had a pace maker implanted (if thats the right word) several years ago, has had diabetes for quite a long time (even though he always insisted that he was cured), and was just not doing well the past few years. I am the oldest of his 7 grandkids and we were the most important things in his life. The last few weeks when he was in the hospital, there was a whiteboard hanging on the wall and it said "What is important to me today". He had one of the nurses write "my grandkids, all 7 of them" next to it. He really was looking forward to seeing me graduate in June. At the funeral, my grandma kept saying "He never got to see her graduate and he really wanted that." I know for a fact that he would have moved heaven and earth just to be able to see me in my cap and gown getting my diploma. If he were still alive, the only thing that would keep him away would be if he were in the hospital and it were physically impossible for him to be. And he would have been devastated if that were the case. We would have had to videotape the whole thing for him and that would not have been close to making it up to him.
I guess all families are different. That is just how my Pap is, but I guess other people aren't like that. That's not necessarily a bad thing, though.
My grandfather passed away about a week ago. He was on kidney dialysis for the past 2 years, had a pace maker implanted (if thats the right word) several years ago, has had diabetes for quite a long time (even though he always insisted that he was cured), and was just not doing well the past few years. I am the oldest of his 7 grandkids and we were the most important things in his life. The last few weeks when he was in the hospital, there was a whiteboard hanging on the wall and it said "What is important to me today". He had one of the nurses write "my grandkids, all 7 of them" next to it. He really was looking forward to seeing me graduate in June. At the funeral, my grandma kept saying "He never got to see her graduate and he really wanted that." I know for a fact that he would have moved heaven and earth just to be able to see me in my cap and gown getting my diploma. If he were still alive, the only thing that would keep him away would be if he were in the hospital and it were physically impossible for him to be. And he would have been devastated if that were the case. We would have had to videotape the whole thing for him and that would not have been close to making it up to him.
I guess all families are different. That is just how my Pap is, but I guess other people aren't like that. That's not necessarily a bad thing, though.