I still have my mother, but I can tell you about losing my father:
I was 25, married, and had my life solidly together. He had been sick, so I had warning that this was coming, and I had gone to see him two weeks before he actually died. We had lots of bad blood between us; he had abandoned us when I was younger, and he had caused me a great deal of difficulty throughout my life.
I would've thought it wouldn't have hit me so hard, but IT DID. On the night that my aunt called to tell me that he had actually died, I was literally on the kitchen floor crying harder than I would've believed possible, unable to get off the floor, unable to speak. (It didn't take much for my husband to figure out what I'd heard in that phone call.)
How'd I get over it? It actually didn't take me a tremendous amount of time to get past the horrible part, but every now and then -- and it's been 20 years -- I still cry for him. Even though he wasn't really a positive influence in my life, I loved him.
I was 25, married, and had my life solidly together. He had been sick, so I had warning that this was coming, and I had gone to see him two weeks before he actually died. We had lots of bad blood between us; he had abandoned us when I was younger, and he had caused me a great deal of difficulty throughout my life.
I would've thought it wouldn't have hit me so hard, but IT DID. On the night that my aunt called to tell me that he had actually died, I was literally on the kitchen floor crying harder than I would've believed possible, unable to get off the floor, unable to speak. (It didn't take much for my husband to figure out what I'd heard in that phone call.)
How'd I get over it? It actually didn't take me a tremendous amount of time to get past the horrible part, but every now and then -- and it's been 20 years -- I still cry for him. Even though he wasn't really a positive influence in my life, I loved him.