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I visited my Dad on Monday because I knew he only had days or weeks to live. He then passed Tuesday morning. He had cancer for years of the face that came back strong in recent months. I keep thinking of a few things that are bothering me, I was hoping to get some advice from anyone who knows about end of life and who has perhaps dealt with losing a loved one.


1. Did he die so suddenly after my visit because he was "waiting" to see us? I've been told this and hope he wasn't holding on in pain if that was the case. It makes me feel guilt. I did expect him to live longer than a day, because when I saw him, he was still able to understand and sign for "I want water" and stuff like that. I guess I just don't understand how the body works and how it goes so quickly without ALL the death signs like being unresponsive for DAYS.
2. When I saw him it was a worse scene visually than I thought. He was so thin and out of it and the cancer was visible in ways that I didn't imagine. I felt so horrible and can't get the image out of my mind? How do I move past that?
2. I didn't know what to say to him because I didn't want to say things that would make him think that he was dying or that would upset him (for example I didn't say "you were such an amazing dad and I am going to miss you"). I was just kind of there with him. I held his hand. When I left he was in a deep sleep and I whispered "bye Dad, I love you". That was about as mushy as I got, and I thought there is no way he would hear it because I said it very quietly and he was in a deep morphine sleep, but he did twinge very slightly when I said it. Not sure if that was a coincidence.
3. When I was there, he got the most energy when my husband was in the room alone with him (his "buddy"). My Dad went from being unable to really move, to getting a burst of energy when he was along with him. He reached out his arm for my husband to come closer. My dad then magically pulled himself up and sat on the side of the bed and tried to stand up. My husband had to stop him from getting up because he would fall. My husband kind of put his arms around him like a hug to keep him from getting up. Then my Mom came in to assist. When they were trying to convince him not to get up, I heard him whimper a phrase, and to me it sound like "I love you". That's the only time I heard him speak with the exception of him telling my husband "get me out of here" when he first tried to get up. I feel bad because amongst the chaos of him trying to get up, no one else heard it and so no one said it back. This is my biggest heart ache. What if he was just trying to get up because he wanted a hug and to say "I love you". I don't know how to get past that moment and feeling horrible for him that he possibly did not get his point across. My mom said it was the first time he sat up in about 5 days.

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I have lost my parents and brother .Each death had some similarities and some differences. You can play the "what if?" Game from Now til dooms day. And it will not help. But you first need to grieve and that may take a day or even years. What helped me was the gathering of family and friends and telling their memories and these are sometimes funny. When you are ready bring yourself to remember these memories and the good memories of yours. When you get the image that you don't want to remember force yourself to think of those memories..I assume that this may be your passing of a loved one whom you were Very close . So I can tell you that you will always miss your father but you will think of the good times and what he looked like just give yourself time you did all the right things and perhaps when he said I love you it was meant for you since only you heard it. Take that and remember he said it to you. God gave him the strength. To move to the side of the bed to meet the arms of the angel of death and with his last burst of energy he said I LOVE YOU. Also remember he has a new body a new face and is in no more pain, he is walking, running,jumping singing praises to Jesus Christ.and watching over you. Let the emotions come they will dimmish as time moves on... Jesus loves you.
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Not sure if anyone knows the answers to anything when it comes to death. When my father passed May 2020, we were allowed to visit because they were monitoring him and they knew is would be soon. He was not awake and they had him on a very small amount of morphine to keep him from struggling to breathe. After visiting, I touched his hand and said "you can rest easy now".......3 hours later he passed. I have been told and read that the hearing part of the brain is the last to go that is why it is important for even those in comas, etc., to not say anything that you wouldn't say to them if they were awake. I am sure bursts of energy come and go before passing because the pain is being taken from their body by the "higher power" (for whichever you believe in), and prepping their way into the "light"........so I am sure that your father knew his time was coming and you should not feel bad for anything left unsaid, etc. You can "talk" to him in prayer or visit his gravesite and talk with him. I am sure your words will travel to him on the wings of Angels. I wish you luck
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You did everything right. Your dad heard you tell him you loved him. He put everything into a burst of energy to let your husband know how important he was, too. My father woke up to greet my sister and her husband before he passed. It's different for everyone but I always marvel at the very thin boundary between life and death.
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This is a wonderful place for answers from those who know. I pretty much tortured myself for three years that I could’ve saved my father‘s life somehow, and I’ve been more present and not raising my child on another continent. Well this is possibly true I also realize that had he lived another five years - his life might be one of living in a nursing home, going in for blood transfusions for diabetics on a multi weekly basis. Instead, he left this world two months after ‘ never retiring’ at age 90, a burden to no one. Likely the way he wanted to go, on Rosh Hashanah. I later learned this means completion, a completed life. he left this world the day after his wedding anniversary, and on the hundredth anniversary of his business. The last item in his “new items list “ was stiff shoelaces. he had a novelty company. That I now run in his honor. It is not my passion or talent, it is my inheritance, more so , my inheritance is What he taught me about life, and what attitude to take. And I am 100% sure that your father left you that same gift. What he looked like, in those last days, is the process of a soul leaving a dissolving body. I agree with what others have said, carry around the picture of him that you have in your mind that is his most vibrant self. Look at it often. I know he is on your side whatever you do in life. Much love.
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I had a thought that may ease your heart. My mother died at home with my dad and sister and I at her side. It was very tough to get that last visual out of my head. We found a lovely portrait photo of her taken at my brother's wedding and had it framed for each of us. Whenever the final image popped up, I would go look at the photo of a time of great joy for her. It took a bit of time, but the mental image faded.
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My condolences over the loss of your dad. It's hard, I know, to get rid of certain end-of-life images from your mind; the brain tends to hold onto painful images rather than beautiful ones, for some reason.

When I conjure up images of my dad when he was dying or looking thin and sickly, I immediately force myself to remember a moment in time when he was laughing and happy. Like during a Thanksgiving dinner at my kitchen table surrounded by family and eating a dish my husband made especially for him b/c he knew my dad would love it. Or opening a gift I'd given him & seeing the look of shock on his face, knowing I was sending him back to southern Italy, his birthplace, which he'd been gone from for 70 years. THOSE are the memories I want to hold onto, not the sad and ugly ones of him in pain or misery.

The rest of the answers to your questions won't come in your lifetime, but will be answered when you're reunited with your dad again in the afterlife.

In the meantime, just know that he loved you, and you loved him, and your dad FELT that love before he passed onto the next leg of his journey. He heard what you said, don't doubt that for a second!
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I'm so sorry for you loss and the heartache you are going through. Although my father was on hospice the last six months of his life - he was old and tired - tired of living and after having developed heart issues at 91 he decided to have no active treatment. He'd been wanting to die for a couple of years. He was also suffering from dementia. A couple of months before dying he moved to the SNF of his community.

He quickly lost ground in SNF especially his alzheimers. I went over to visit him and mom about once a week. One time I showed up dad was kind of half asleep and kept trying to get out of his wheelchair. I sat on a chair across from him, gently rubbed his hands and kept gently pushing him down as he was trying to get up. My father was profoundly dear, but I just rubbed his hand and talked very softly to him. I told him it was ok to go, just let go and start his new life. I told him I loved him and that the remaining family would be ok. While I was talking in a voice he couldn't hear I do believe deep inside he could hear me While dad wanted to die, he couldn't give up control of his file. He lived for a couple more months.

It was kind of funny, the hospice nurse called on a Monday to give an update said dad was doing well and still trying to climb out of his chair (dad wasn't a fall risk, he fell, constantly - at least once a week - at the end it was more of a slide to the floor than a fall.) The following Wednesday the SNF called to say dad died shortly after mom had been to visit him. He was sitting in his recliner in the common area and just went to sleep and died.

It's hard to say when or why someone dies the way they do. Some hang on because of something special going on in the family (like a marriage or graduation). Many die once everyone leaves.

I believe your father deep down heard you say "I love you." If it was the first time in 5 day he sat up, I believe you when you say you heard him say "I love you." Hold that last memory close to your heart. Know that he is now out of pain and in a better place.

My prayers are with you and your family.
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Imho, I am so sorry for your loss. It's quite common for many who are very ill to have a burst of energy. Please know that he conveyed his love for you in other ways that verbal.
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So sorry for your loss. I can say from many experiences with multiple family members it is hard to be the last one to see someone before their end comes. It is hard to deal with for sure. It took me a long time to realize that it is a special blessing that my loved ones felt at peace after our visit to let themselves find their way and be at peace without pain. ( My pastor told me that this is a special gift.)
I take comfort in knowing that they are still with me in many ways too. If it is a moment that makes me think of them, or a trinket from them, maybe a photo, a song, it could be anything that brings me a fond memory. Yes, it's not the same playing solitaire versus playing cribbage on a warm summer night at the kitchen table but I feel like my dad is still there at the table watching me play. It all depends on what each of us believes in or wants to believe in. I hope you find your peace.
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After my dad died, I found a lot of solace and help from a grief support group. The one I attended was run by a hospice, and it welcomed me in despite the act that my dad was not on hospice. It helped me process my guilt at not supporting him more in his last days. I would recommend one.
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It is very hard when you loose a parent. I’ve had to suffer many losses the last few years, including loosing my husband. I attended GriefShare and found it enormously helpful in sorting out all the complicated emotions that go along with grief. I also got private counseling which has helped too. Hope you will seek out help. Things will get better but don’t be afraid to ask for help in getting there.
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I am so so sorry for your loss. I accompanied my father in death and, like you, did what I could. You couldn’t take his pain away and nobody is really in charge of when the body shuts down. We die by inches, not really all at once. Now grief takes lots of time. My Dad died in 2003 and I think of him every day but I agree with President Biden that a time comes when your memory of him will bring smiles rather than tears. Please don’t torture yourself with guilt. You did what you could and you sound like a really caring person so you must have part of your father inside— and he will always be there.
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There are always lots of questions when a loved one dies. Yours are not at all unusual. I still have questions and regrets about my parents even though they died in 2012 and 2015.

I highly recommend grief counseling, either in a group or one-on-one with someone who specializes in this. Many of your questions will receive answers. Check with your local hospital and/or hospice to see if they have such a group or can refer you to a counselor. Also, check online for grief counselors in your area.

Praying that you will receive answers and comfort in the days ahead.
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I am so sorry for your loss.  Witnessing the end of a life, especially someone as paramount as a parent... is devastating...shocking and it hurts.  It will take time for you to come to grips with it.  No one has the answers to your questions.  It was enough that you were there to see him. You are trying to make sense of your fathers death by scrutinize everything that happened.  It's part of the grieving process.  Try to focus on all of the years of good.  For the first couple of years after my fathers death, I visited his gravesite and cried or talked about what was going on with our family.  It took a long while before I could go there without breaking down.  You will get there too.
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I’m sorry for your loss and anguish. I was with my dad around the clock for his last week and learned not to attempt to decipher every move or action he did. Often, there’s simply no way to know as the dying process is a solo journey, we won’t know until we’re there what it’s like. We have in common not being able to talk a lot toward the end, that’s how I react in super stressful times, I just can’t get much of anything out. I’ve come to look at it this way—my in-laws constantly say “love you” each time they speak to us or most anyone. It’s like an auto response. They are very uninterested in us, our children, our lives, always have been, but the “love you” comes over and over. My dad probably verbally said he loved me less than a dozen times in my life. Guess what? I have no issue with that, because his life told the love. He was a great dad, always interested and involved. So I’ve decided that sometimes it’s not the words that matter, those close to us know how we each feel by our actions, it’s the sum of a life and how it’s lived, even when not expressed in words. I’m sure your dad knew your love and appreciation of him. Let the comfort of good memories of him help bring you healing. I wish you peace
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Yes, it's not uncommon for people dying to have a spurt of energy before passing.

Yes, he could have been waiting for a goodbye which he did get which is great.
No doubt about it, Death Sucks!

Just have peace that you did see him in the end.

Mout people want their loved ones to know they love you and I'm sure he knew you did and in fact probably heard you but just being there was proof enough.
Have peace that you will all be united again in Heaven.

Prayers
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I am an RN and have had plenty of patients at the end of their lives. Most patients tend to have "life tasks" that they need to complete before letting go into death. Some need to know that their homes, bills, estate, pets... are taken care of - those people need reassurances that everything will be taken care of. Some people need spiritual business completed: last communion, visit from a pastor, being able to resolve conflict with family or friend - they need others to help them complete those tasks. Some need to "say goodbye" to loved ones before passing and will hold on until the last person visits. I had a grandfather who waited until my visit to die the next day. Some folks will also pick the circumstances of their death. Some choose to wait until everyone is gathered at the bedside to pass. Others prefer to pass when everybody is out of the room.

As for what to say/do for those in their last days, it really doesn't matter as long as it is loving or kind. Your words/actions were how you express love. Your husband's words/actions were how he expressed love. Both are appropriate. The fact that your dad passed soon after indicates that those words and actions were what he was waiting for.

As for death process. Most people with chronic disease that pass into death have a slow decline. They will sleep more, eat and drink less, and be less focused. The goal is to provide comfort and allow interaction with family and friends. His cancer may have altered his appearance as did his weight loss and possible dehydration. If it had been awhile since you had seen him, the change can be a shock - naturally. Try to think about the changes in light of his cancer and his body systems slowly shutting down.

May I suggest that you get some help to process your grief. Grief groups are composed of people processing the loss of a loved one. Some are led by professional counsellors and others are led by other experienced group members. I like GriefShare. If groups seem intimidating, please consider meeting regularly with a counsellor. Your doctor or community of faith can direct you to local grief groups or qualified counsellors.
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Go easy on yourself! Give yourself plenty of time for this process. You might second guess those last days and hours for years. Just know that you and everyone else did the best you knew how to do at the moment.

Your whispered "Bye dad. I love you" was the perfect thing to say and just being there was the perfect thing to do.

Your dad's last "rally" is common in the dying process. If your dad was "waiting for you," that was what he wanted to do. Cry when you feel terrible and cry again when you remember again. The pain softens the more times you let yourself feel it.

It takes at least many months, maybe longer, but it does not need to consume your whole day. You will begin to find yourself smiling at something or appreciating a sunrise or remembering funny things your dad said or did when he was well.

Remember that you did what seemed right at the time it was happening. Carry your father's memory in your heart.
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My deepest condolences.
Everything you wrote I've experienced both personally and many times as a hospice nurse and a vigil volunteer in two hospice organizations. On my last visit with my dear friend who was clearly close to death and barely responsive, when I took her hand, told her it was me, said, "J. Keep me going". She was hanging on until her son, son in law and childhood friend arrived. She died peacefully with the circle 7 hours later.
My Dad did a 'rally before the final crash'. I've seen many patients over the years do that as well. It's a last burst of energy to say or do what they feel that they must.
Do NOT for a second believe that your beloved dad didn't know that you loved him. He knew your heart. All you have described is part of the normal process.

Go in peace
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You are really going through some soul searching now and reliving those last moments which you wish you could change. Please know this is normal. In the moments like these, none of us have a script from which we act. We do what we do and that can’t be changed. I too have gone back over the last time I saw my dad while he lay in a coma two days before he died, and wished I would have done some things differently but that is in the past. Needing to come to peace with what was is a stage of grief. Know that even though you can now change nothing...it is normal.

Did your dad have hospice care? If he did, the hospice chaplain is still there for the family for up to a year after the death. If that is something he had then you can call and ask to talk to him or her about your feelings. Or talk to your own pastor or rabbi or a licensed therapist. It is helpful to talk with ones who have experience in this area of grief.
please know many of us have doubts like this...process it, talk to someone until you can put it in the rear view mirror. Hugs.
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First of all I agree with everyone else’s comments. My first experience with the dying process in my adult life was for my 39 y/o brother in law. I was part of his family that was there through the end. I truly believe he stayed with us until we could drive him from PA to WI to be at his brothers house and surrounded by his family. That said he was in a morphine state also and I was talking to him, he woke up and said, “do you want to dance with me?” I remember it clear as yesterday because I told him, “dance with me? Now that would be a great idea and yes we will dance again some day.” He passed away that next morning.

Another thought reminds me of the Dragonfly story. It may help you understand how your dad wanted so much to be back with you all, but his earthly body just would not let him. Hospice uses this story a lot to help those who remain here on earth to “understand”. I hope it helps you.
Be at peace knowing your dad heard you and wanted to be with you.

“The Dragonfly
~Author Unknown~ 
Once, in a little pond, in the muddy water under the lily pads, there lived a little water beetle in a community of water beetles. They lived a simple and comfortable life in the pond with few disturbances and interruptions.

Once in a while, sadness would come to the community when one of their fellow beetles would climb the stem of a lily pad and would never be seen again. They knew when this happened; their friend was dead, gone forever.

Then, one day, one little water beetle felt an irresistible urge to climb up that stem. However, he was determined that he would not leave forever. He would come back and tell his friends what he had found at the top.

When he reached the top and climbed out of the water onto the surface of the lily pad, he was so tired, and the sun felt so warm, that he decided he must take a nap. As he slept, his body changed and when he woke up, he had turned into a beautiful blue-tailed dragonfly with broad wings and a slender body designed for flying.

So, fly he did! And, as he soared he saw the beauty of a whole new world and a far superior way of life to what he had never known existed. Then he remembered his beetle friends and how they were thinking by now he was dead. He wanted to go back to tell them, and explain to them that he was now more alive than he had ever been before. His life had been fulfilled rather than ended.

But, his new body would not go down into the water. He could not get back to tell his friends the good news. Then he understood that their time would come, when they, too, would know what he now knew. So, he raised his wings and flew off into his joyous new life!”
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jacobsonbob Apr 2021
This is cute, and makes an excellent point. (However, as one having two entomological degrees, I can assure you that predaceous nymphs called naiads, rather than water beetles, are what eventually result in the adult dragonflies.) I've always hoped that insects have more self-awareness than just being little protoplasm-filled "robots" although I doubt they can remember what happened during their previous life stages. My specialization is the social wasps, with which the adults at least get to see the earlier stages because they have to care for them.

Of more direct relevance to the general subject of this string, I suspect that one can never know whether a particular death after a family visit was the result of a conscious "decision" or coincidence (unless, perhaps, if the dying person makes a comment to that effect). My mother was in a nursing home when a lockdown due to COVID was enforced, so we were unable to visit her for the last month of her life. Other than sending a letter, my sister and I had no contact. Before then, one or the other of us would visit most days of the week. However, we finally decided that perhaps the staff could help us find a way such that she could see and hear us (she was very hard of hearing), so we were able to contact her one afternoon--and she died that evening. I believe the lack of contact meant that we couldn't help her with meals and bring foods and snacks she liked, and therefore probably shortened her life somewhat, I'm not convinced that her death the day we called was anything other than coincidence.

I hope liz1983 can keep in mind that she did her best for her father, and recall the good times together while realizing that her father knew she loved him. One shouldn't feel guilty about something one can't control, but liz1983 should realize her presence made her father happy and be thankful for that final opportunity (as opposed to having arrived after his death).
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I am so sorry for your loss.

Don’t feel guilt. I called my niece and nephew to see their dad in hospice.

They drove in from out of town and they did get to speak with him.

I firmly believe that my brother was waiting for them.

My brother died shortly afterwards just as your dad did.

I am so happy that you were able to see your dad.
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It's been 8 years since my grandmother passed and I think about the night before and that morning pretty frequently. I have peace about it but it still is a painful memory for me, in some ways. She was nearly 104yo, had lost 30 pounds the month before she died, and somehow I still hoped she could recover some. It was naive but so hopeful on my part, I wanted her to live forever. Some part of me must have known it wasn't going to work out like that, and I'd told her things to reassure her, like that I'd look after my dad after she passed, when I was with her the night before she died. That was her big concern in life, her child.

I wish you peace, Liz, in the coming days, weeks, months, and years. All of it's ok; all of it's hard. Your dad knew he was loved and that's why you guys were all there for him. Don't feel guilty for any "mistakes." Or at least understand that it's part of the dying process, and we don't have a timer counting down, so we do what we think is best at the moment. Condolences to you and your family on the loss.
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I'm so sorry that your dad died. I also have a terrible last image of my brother that I hope will not last too much longer. I think your dad heard you say you love him. And you were there and you held his hand and it helped him. Be at peace.
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Liz, all this second guessing that you are doing is normal I think. My mom passed away almost 5 years ago on May 9th and I still sometimes relive her final moments thinking why did she do that and why didn't I do this. It is completely normal to be having these thoughts.

I don't think anyone could write a handbook for how to do this correctly because I don't think there is a right or wrong way. You are in the midst of a gamut of emotions and do what you think is best at the time. I doubt that your Father was thinking that you or anyone else was doing anything wrong. He was experiencing his own gamut of emotions.

Rest easy and try to not be so hard on yourself. I'm so sorry for your loss.
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First, I am so sorry that you have lost your dad. It sounds like you had a good one, and for that be grateful. Often people that are dying will wait until they get to see their loved ones, before they leave this earth. And please don't feel any guilt about that, as your dad just wanted to see you one last time. Everyone's dying process is different. There is no one size fits all. It's also normal for a person that's dying to "rally" shortly before they die, and it sounds like that was what your dad was doing when he sat up and was trying to get up.
Your dad knew that you loved him, and you did get to say it to him one last time. That's more than some get to do. And just so you know, hearing is the last sense to go, so your dad did hear you tell him that. I'm sure too that you heard your dad correctly when you thought he said I love you. He wanted you to know that, as I'm sure you already knew.
As far as your last image of him, all I can tell you is to just try and remember him in his healthier days, and the many good times you had with him. I know that can be easier said than done, but in time you will be able to. It doesn't happen over night, you will be grieving the loss of your dad for a long, long time, so allow yourself some grace to do just that.
Again, I am so very sorry for your loss. May God grant you His peace and comfort in the days, weeks, and months ahead.
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I'm very, very sorry for the loss of your dad.

I think I can empathize with what you're going through. I also have images of the last day of my mom's life that are hard to get out of my head, They still bother me sometimes, but I can say honestly that time is helping to heal that wound.

I want to reassure you that your dad knows how much you love him. *If* he was "holding on" to see you, then be sure that seeing you did give him comfort at the end. If dad was using hospice services, then I'm sure they made sure he wasn't in pain; that's their mission and they excel at it.

You can still talk to dad; I have a 2 family home and my mom lived (and died) in my apartment. I still talk to her whenever I go in there: "hey, mom, can I use your bathroom?" "Hey, mom, I'm just gonna throw something in your fridge" - things along those lines. It's made the transition a little easier when I go up into what I still consider "her space".

Time will help the healing process. If you find yourself unable to function, please find a grief support group to join, even if you need to do it virtually. It helps, talking to people who have gone through similar circumstances.

Again, I'm so sorry for your loss. (((hugs)))
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As an RN
1. I believe not so much waiting to see you and hanging on as HAVING seen you, at peace to let go.
2.I am so sorry that your last vision of your Dad was so tough. I will leave you with this; in days to come it may make it EASIER to accept and let go, may make you understand that his fight was over, and he had done it to his last strength. The warrior is diminished by the fight to which he gives his all.
2.(you have two twos) He may or may not have heard you. When in last stages I think they hear in much the way we hear when we are kids in the back seat of the car, falling asleep after a busy day, hearing our parent's comforting voices from front of the car as we are driven home, and we loll in that inbetween land between sleep and wakefulness, lulled in almost a comfortable drugged like state. What you said is GREAT. Just fine. He knows you will remember him, and he knows you will always have him with you, for if he has lived some long years he has carried others in his heart, his soul, his mind throughout his life.
3. He saw your hubby, I think, as the one coming for him, to rescue him, and he was "ready to go" with his buddy. The two of them on one last escape try. Help me break out of here; I can do it with you helping! Then comes "Mom" to say "Nope, back to bed you go" and it's a shrug and a "nice try. Love you."
You were there for him. There is for every human on earth this last parting, full of pathos, pain, questions. He was so lucky in all the love around him, to my mind. I wish you healing. I believe he will be with you forever, as my Dad is with me. No, we can't reach out. I lost my 85 year old so much loved bro last year, the best man in my life second to my Dad. I just thought yesterday, nearing his anniversary of his death "Oh, Dee, what did you call that boarding place you stayed in when you first got to your beloved San Francisco?" I couldn't come up with it. And later it came to me. Almost like an answer. It was called "The Orphanage" by those men who stayed there.
He will be with you. Trust me.
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RedVanAnnie Apr 2021
Just like your asking Dee to help you remember something, I am forever asking my late husband where something is that I cannotfind. Or commenting to my late father about how much he would have enjoyed a lecture or a tennis match on TV.
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I'm so, so sorry. You went through a traumatic time, and everything you're feeling is completely normal.

My dad also died of cancer, and he wasn't unresponsive for days. He alternated between awake and asleep for about the last 24 hours. (In the case of my grandfather, who I was also with when he died, we were talking two hours before he died.) People don't always take days to die, especially with cancer. I also had a friend who had lunch, got up to go take a nap, and died in her sleep at 50 years old with no warning except that she had cancer.

The sight of your dad in that last day will blissfully fade away. My dad didn't look anything like himself once the life had passed out of him, and I was terrified I'd have that image in my mind forever. Within a month I couldn't even bring it up in my mind, and I can't to this day, nearly 2 1/2 years later. I've very grateful for that, but it makes sense, too, because I knew my dad as a healthy, vibrant guy for well over 50 years, and the sight on him on his deathbed lasted just an hour or so. Trust me -- the sight will fade.

They say the hearing is the last thing to go, so trust that what you said to your dad was heard. He knew it even if you didn't say it.

It sounds like your dad did get his point across if you heard him say "I love you." Tell your mom and your husband and whoever might not have heard it, because it'll bring them comfort, too.

Hug your loved ones close -- your dad sounds like he was a great guy.
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