Brenda Duff

Death of a Mother

 

October 2019 Update: It’s been two years and I still haven’t been able to write more about this process of dealing with my mother’s death.  It still hurts and most days I try not to dwell. My mother had moved to Oregon before her passing, so most days I just pretend she’s still out there, even though she is sitting in my living room in a little container that I have not been able to bring myself to look at since it arrived.  I still catch myself wanting to call her or thinking about what I am going to get her for Christmas.

I really hate that word, death. It is so final or at least what we have associated the word to mean is so final, an ending. I prefer transitioned, gone home, moved on, is in a better place, anything but that word death.  The hardest part is putting that word death in a sentence with your mother. Mom has died. It looks so terrible even written. So short and final. Three words that change the lives of generations.

 

Matriarch©EvelynDortch EclecticEvelyn.com
Evelyn Dortch, Brenda Duff, Louise Keeney, Flotie Douglas

 

I felt the need to let you know about my mother’s passing but it is still too raw to really write about. It has been a week and I still have to put it out of my mind and deal with it in little pieces. Being an only child, I am required to handle all the final expenses, preparations, bills, estate, etc. It is very hard to deal with my grief while I’m trying to figure out how I am supposed to pay for all this since she had no life insurance.  My daughter set up a go fund me type thing called you caring through my Facebook to try to raise the money. Here’s the link. You can help by giving and sharing on social media.

 

I felt the need to let you, my readers and friends, know what was going on. I felt the need to notify you, my online family. Notify the family…. telling my children their last living grandparent had died. Their grandmother, Grandma, G-mama, confidant, and friend was gone was devastating. Even though my children are now adults, I am their mother and I want to shield them from pain not inflict it upon them. Those phone calls were the worst. Then I had to tell my uncle, my mother’s only sibling, a man who buried his wife not long ago, that his baby sister died. Sissy, as she was called when she was little was gone.

 

The Little Ones ©Evelyn Dortch EclecticEvelyn.com
Tommy Hardesty, Bill Keeney, Warren Keeney, Brenda Keeney Witcher, WV circa 1950

 

I plan to write some posts about all this including some how-to’s and maybe a checklist so that other’s in my situation will find some help but for now, I will be using my blog as an escape, a respite, a place to go and not have to be an orphan, a motherless child, a next of kin.  So, if subsequent posts seem mindless or frivolous know that I am still in mourning.

 

Mom©EvelynDortch EclecticEvelyn.com

 

[clickToTweet tweet=”… we all handle the death of our mother in our own way. No one can tell you how to grieve.  #EclecticEvelyn ” quote=”We all mourn differently and we all handle the death of our mother in our own way. No one can tell you how to grieve. ” theme=”style3″]

 

 

6 thoughts on “Death of a Mother”

  1. I do understand how it feels to lost a mother. Glad you had an output on how you will do it. Unlike me, when I lost my mom from cancer, I had my little room where I cried a river from guilt and pain.

  2. Evelyn, my mother died many years ago, and still every time something wonderful happens I want to reach for the phone and call her. But it does become a bit easier with time. Thinking of you at this difficult time when the loss is still quite fresh. #TrafficJam

  3. I do empathize as I lost my own mother in 2010. Don’t let anyone tell you how to grieve because everyone is different, and every loss is different. The best advice I can give is to be kind to yourself and accept nothing less from others. My heart goes out to you, and I wish you all the best.

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