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I’ve been reading on this forum for the last year or so. My mother became ill January of 2019 with Pulmonary Emboli and DVTs recurring pneumonia and eventually in March was diagnosed with CHF.


We engaged hospice and by May had full time home care set up for her. She got much better over the summer and needed less full time care, but started to decline again in September.


By January of 2020, we were back to full time care with either my brother or myself there as often as we could be. We both live a distance away from my mom and she didn’t want to leave her home.


Mom passed away at home with both my brother and me there, as well as some amazing caregivers that we had hired along the way.


My mother was very fortunate to be able to stay in her home with so many caring people around her. The thing that I’m kind of trying to work through today is this. A few weeks before she died, she asked me why I was doing all this for her. Then she told me that she wouldn’t do it for me.


Now you might say that it was dementia talking, and perhaps it was, but I already knew that she wouldn’t have done the same for me. She wouldn’t even come to visit my family in the last few years of her life.


Something about the brutal honesty of the statement just has me unsettled. She was a great mom and a great person. She helped many people through her life and many people thought she was a great woman.


I guess I just don’t understand how you wouldn’t drop everything for your child if they needed you.

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Since you knew she was sincere and lucid when she said she wouldn’t have done the same for you.... that is not a “great” mom or person. It’s crappy. She basically told you you weren’t worth it to her. And I think deep down you realize that. It’s very hard to accept when the one who was supposed to love us unconditionally— a mother’s love— simply didn’t love us like she ought. It makes us feel terrible and maybe we have to accept the fact that Mom wasn’t the mom we needed.

We tend to exalt our dead. “Oh, grandma was so lovely, if only I could hear her complain once more just to have her here!”... when in life they were actually difficult people.

You can miss someone and still be real that they weren’t a great parent or person.
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I would consider that the reason she didn't visit you in the last few years of her life, was due to dementia. Dementia creeps up sometimes. I didn't know what early dementia looked like, until my LO (cousin) got it. I never understood why she stopped coming to family holiday gatherings and meals. She would fake being sick or show up and leave early. LATER, I found out that she was confused, scared and disoriented. She hid the fact she had early dementia. She could still manage her household. She was embarrassed that she couldn't keep up with the conversation, she had forgotten names of family members, and felt overwhelmed when out of her home. It wasn't that she didn't want to or that she didn't still love us. She was scared. I feel bad now that I shamed her over not showing up.

And, I wouldn't take what someone who has dementia says near the time of death. She likely suffered delusions. Near death, she likely had low oxygen to the brain. My LO (cousin) later in her dementia, doesn't even know who I am. At one point, she thought the staff members were her friends and that the deliveryman was her boyfriend that she dated. They get things mixed up. So, I'd base my opinion of your mother on her life as a whole and not a few things she said after getting dementia.

If you still believe that she was not as caring as you would like, I'd try to look at the positive and negative, weigh it out and try to take with you, things that comfort you. I know that with my mom, I see things that no other people in this world see and it's pretty negative. I have chosen to forgive her and accept it. She's not perfect and that is just something that she will take with her to her grave one day. I have chosen to free myself from it. I hope that you can find peace.
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My mother is an extremely selfish woman. I was just telling my 28 y/o daughter that when I was pregnant with my first child, my son, I was very sick and spent more time in the hospital than out of it. My mother was living across the country at the time and working as a saleswoman in the Better Sportswear Dept at what's now Macy's. She was making lots of $$$ in commissions and doing lots of dirty deeds by switching price tags and fighting other saleswomen for sales. She wasn't about to give any of that up to come help me out, or give me support, while I was in the hospital for the better part of 5 months. Oh, she talked a good game, asking if I 'wanted' her to come to Connecticut, where I was living at the time, but I wasn't going to ASK her to come. I wanted her to WANT to come, know what I mean?

But you know what? You can't get blood from a stone.

And here's another thing: when someone is facing the end of their life, they start thinking. They start making realizations. They start feeling sorry for the things they didn't do so perfectly in life. Take my father, for instance. When I lied in bed next to him during his hospice days, I told him what a great dad he was and what an accomplished man he'd been in his life. He vehemently disagreed. He said he'd been a failure. He was looking back over his life, ruing what he'd been and lamenting what he could have done differently. Nothing I said was going to change HIS mind.

Your mother was facing the end of her life here on Earth. She knew she was selfish in certain ways, and she was honestly asking WHY you were doing something for HER that she didn't have in her to do for YOU. Why? What quality did you have inside of your soul that she lacked? An honest question, more than likely. And probably not intended to hurt you.........or to leave you unsettled, in spite of it having left you that way (as it would have me).

When I am at the end of my life, and my whole life is flashing before my eyes, I think I will wonder why I did certain things, or felt certain ways, and probably wish I'd done some things differently too. Who's to say?

Right after my father took his last breath, my mother began crying. She said that she 'wasn't very nice' to him during their 68 years of marriage. Which is a gross understatement. But she was already sorry for what she hadn't been for him while he was alive. I imagine that when she is at the end of her life, she will have some regrets to share with me as well.

Your mother was a a great mom and great person, as you've said yourself. She may have lacked certain traits, as she was admitting to you, which does not take away from the fact that she was still a great mom and a great person. Just not perfect.

Now is her chance to be perfect. To be all she wishes she was in human form. Now she is at perfect peace.

I am so sorry for your loss, my friend. Wishing you peace and comfort as you pass through your grieving period.
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I’m sorry for your loss. I don’t have any great answers for the painful thing your mother felt the need to say, but I do hope the knowledge that you did your best for her and set a great example for those who saw and know that is a comfort to you. At the end of the day, we each have to live with what we’ve done. Your mom left this world with a hateful comment. You’ve left her with kindness and compassionate care. That should bring you peace. I wish you that
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