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irisblue

(35,557 posts)
Sun May 4, 2025, 06:43 AM May 2025

Being a motherless daughter is one of the most difficult things to navigate.

Last edited Sun May 4, 2025, 09:41 AM - Edit history (1)

Today would have been my Moms' 89th birthday.
I was jolted awake several hours ago from a dream about her.
Today is going to be a challenge.


Edited to add--Couple of yrs back when Mom started getting hurt and going to the hospital more frequently, she & the kids started a phone text group. Most early AMs for at least 5 yrs, there was check in texts, often a simple, "morning".
Mom discovered that she liked sending memes, some were groaned, some were great.
The phone text group is still being used by us. I have already gotten check ins by my siblings, I am greatful for this.

23 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Being a motherless daughter is one of the most difficult things to navigate. (Original Post) irisblue May 2025 OP
I stayed with my mother until the end. no_hypocrisy May 2025 #1
I held her left hand till much too young Dr Kelly called the official time of death. irisblue May 2025 #17
I'm so sorry. Losing my Mom was the hardest thing in my life and I still miss her every day, LiberalLoner May 2025 #2
Why not decide to celebrate her life today by doing things SheltieLover May 2025 #3
I do this exact thing when It feels like I should. Prairie_Seagull May 2025 #6
I do, too, and it does help. SheltieLover May 2025 #15
I started a pot of the chicken soup she made us at least monthly a short while ago irisblue May 2025 #18
I'm glad you are able to celebrate your time together in this way! SheltieLover May 2025 #20
I'm 81 and still miss my mother. I use a lot of her recipes and always wish I could tell her about it or patricia92243 May 2025 #4
As long as it wasn't a real nightmare, i think of such dreams as an incredible gift when time drops its hold over us lostnfound May 2025 #5
We grieve together today. crim son May 2025 #7
. irisblue May 2025 #19
I'm so sorry for your loss, irisblue. HeartsCanHope May 2025 #8
Irisblue, you will never be motherless as long as your memories of her are kept alive in your mind. Buddyzbuddy May 2025 #9
Make it a day to celebrate how she JMCKUSICK May 2025 #10
My mom died at a young age, suddenly; by aneurysm. peacebuzzard May 2025 #11
My mother died at 98 in 2021. I remember how lucky I felt Croney May 2025 #12
You never stop missing her. mwmisses4289 May 2025 #13
I lost my mother 32 years ago, which was only last week. Yesterday was my MiL's funerall ms liberty May 2025 #14
One of my grandmothers died leaving 2 small daughters and 2 sons. My father was the oldest child at 7. Wonder Why May 2025 #16
My mom is 87, often very insensitive, even downright Dark n Stormy Knight May 2025 #21
You're so lucky to have a Mom you love. She was a good Mom. Clouds Passing May 2025 #22
{hug} I miss mine, but the pain has lessened a lot over 17 yrs... electric_blue68 May 6 #23

no_hypocrisy

(52,445 posts)
1. I stayed with my mother until the end.
Sun May 4, 2025, 06:51 AM
May 2025

One of the bravest things I’ve ever done.

Use today to remember her love and dedication.

irisblue

(35,557 posts)
17. I held her left hand till much too young Dr Kelly called the official time of death.
Sun May 4, 2025, 12:26 PM
May 2025

Moms' passing was as she wanted, peaceful, surrounded by her kids and we sang her favorite hymn as she left us.

LiberalLoner

(11,454 posts)
2. I'm so sorry. Losing my Mom was the hardest thing in my life and I still miss her every day,
Sun May 4, 2025, 06:59 AM
May 2025

When I have a dream about her now, which doesn’t happen often anymore, I like to believe she visited me in my dreams.

I keep a diary, have for over 20 years now, where I write to her from time to time, things I wish I could say to her.

Mostly every time I write, I say I love her and miss her.

I know it’s so hard to live with this grief. I am sorry.

SheltieLover

(72,269 posts)
3. Why not decide to celebrate her life today by doing things
Sun May 4, 2025, 07:21 AM
May 2025

she loved & enjoying her favorite foods, intentionally?

Prairie_Seagull

(4,288 posts)
6. I do this exact thing when It feels like I should.
Sun May 4, 2025, 07:53 AM
May 2025

It helps me to pass through some of the grief of loss.

Take good care irisblue.

irisblue

(35,557 posts)
18. I started a pot of the chicken soup she made us at least monthly a short while ago
Sun May 4, 2025, 12:32 PM
May 2025

She'd make what looked like a giant soup pot, then when the broth was *perfect* she'd pull out the chicken parts, put in the veggies. She'd shred the cooked chicken for chicken in white sauce for later that night as the soup finished cooking, then cooled for dinner the next day.

She only made 1 crappy meal that all of can remember, Liver Supreme, do not ask, the regular liver & onions was really good.

SheltieLover

(72,269 posts)
20. I'm glad you are able to celebrate your time together in this way!
Sun May 4, 2025, 12:40 PM
May 2025

Have you thought of baking her a bday cake?

I did for my dad's 100th bday. Candles & all. My adult gs & I celebrated our time with my dad this way & it felt good to honor the contributions he made to our lives

patricia92243

(12,964 posts)
4. I'm 81 and still miss my mother. I use a lot of her recipes and always wish I could tell her about it or
Sun May 4, 2025, 07:28 AM
May 2025

ask about things that happened years ago.

lostnfound

(17,122 posts)
5. As long as it wasn't a real nightmare, i think of such dreams as an incredible gift when time drops its hold over us
Sun May 4, 2025, 07:40 AM
May 2025

I’m fully aware that dreams are the brain’s attempt to narrate the random PGO spikes of REM sleep, which activate groups of neurons old or new. Wrote a term paper on it in 1985.

But I’m also well aware that time is a very strange phenomenon in science, and that life is intricately beautiful the more we learn, and that we might well be 4-d beings just temporary delayed by a 3.5-d boundary.. Like 3-d printed objects, we feel ourselves being made solid one flat layer at a time.

And therefore, it is okay to imagine occasional visits really are a bit of their light getting through.

crim son

(27,548 posts)
7. We grieve together today.
Sun May 4, 2025, 07:57 AM
May 2025

May 4th was my mother's birthday too. She died in 2021 and would have been 85 today. Just before seeing your post I shed a few tears, looking at a photo of her and wishing with all my heart that I could go back to the days when she was only a phone call away. I will never "get over" it.

Buddyzbuddy

(1,252 posts)
9. Irisblue, you will never be motherless as long as your memories of her are kept alive in your mind.
Sun May 4, 2025, 08:17 AM
May 2025

She'll be there as long as you are alive. She gave you the most precious and valuable thing besides life and that was, time. Her time, to be precise. A non renewable ever shrinking, intangible choice that we all choose how to spend it.
My hope for you is to remember her smile, her laughter and love.
Be well.

JMCKUSICK

(3,340 posts)
10. Make it a day to celebrate how she
Sun May 4, 2025, 08:19 AM
May 2025

Completed you in so many ways, how she prepared you in so many ways, how she showed you in so many ways.
Ultimately, the celebration becomes how much of herself she ended up imparting into you so that you'd have her with you every day.
I hope that's not too intrusive.
Love, John

peacebuzzard

(5,618 posts)
11. My mom died at a young age, suddenly; by aneurysm.
Sun May 4, 2025, 08:20 AM
May 2025

By accounts, she had a massive headache; she managed to call my father, and by her voice, he knew something was wrong. By the time he arrived at her workplace, the first responders were there, taking her to the hospital. She died.
When my father called me with the news, it was the worst moment of my life—the worst day, week, month, year.
My life changed forever that day; it took a completely different trajectory.
I finally had a dream about her, maybe a few months or a year or so later. She was ephemeral in the dream and like an angel. She was smiling, happy, translucent. It was a remarkable dream, and then I woke up.
I never had a dream like that again.
(on edit)P.S. I wanted to share this. I hope you don't mind.

Croney

(4,966 posts)
12. My mother died at 98 in 2021. I remember how lucky I felt
Sun May 4, 2025, 08:20 AM
May 2025

when my mother sent me flowers on my 70th birthday. I'm 80 now and I have her mannerisms and quirks. We are our mothers.

ms liberty

(10,431 posts)
14. I lost my mother 32 years ago, which was only last week. Yesterday was my MiL's funerall
Sun May 4, 2025, 08:55 AM
May 2025

She died on the 27th from dementia.



Wonder Why

(5,996 posts)
16. One of my grandmothers died leaving 2 small daughters and 2 sons. My father was the oldest child at 7.
Sun May 4, 2025, 11:08 AM
May 2025

Just give thanks that your mother lived as long as she did. There are always daughters in a worse situation than yours. It could have even been worse than for my aunts' loss.

I do sympathize with you. When my parents died, I was thankful I had them for as long as I did.

Dark n Stormy Knight

(10,415 posts)
21. My mom is 87, often very insensitive, even downright
Mon May 5, 2025, 01:39 AM
May 2025

hurtful, but I dread her dying. I have not handled grief well at all in my life, especially recently.

She's in relatively good health, but many of my much younger family members and friends have died in the past few years, so I know there's no way to predict.

I hope your day went more easily than you feared.

electric_blue68

(22,779 posts)
23. {hug} I miss mine, but the pain has lessened a lot over 17 yrs...
Tue May 6, 2025, 06:56 PM
May 6

First yr, or so - it was oten so fierce. Lean on folks to help you through those bad bouts.

She had an unexpected sort of sudden problem that was very exacerbated by a weird infection's complication about 20 yrs earlier. She was 86. It was extra sad bc 2 of her brothers, and her one sister
lived to about mid 90's w pretty sharp minds.
She was on the smart side, loved science, nature and art, highly creative design wise in crafts, trained as a dress maker - our clothes were superbly made, cared about justice & equality and taught us, excellent cook, loved to have fun.

She shows up in my dreams (though she had terrible asthma at times there'll be a scary dream; usually they're good ones).
_____________________________
Here's a thought as you feel up to it...get a sturdy notebook, and write down the good, and wonderful memories of her. That way you always have it.

Take each minute, hour, day, week, month at a time.
If you're prone to fighting tears - don't when you're home. Allow grief. It's different for everyone how it unfolds.

[ May seem an unusual example how grieving can happen: I love architecture. At my art & architecture school '70 - '74, we made fun of the original world trade tower buildings 1 & 2.
Then I worked in Tower 2 '80 -'81, 73rd flr (2 elevators!) north east corner. The views were incredible!

9-11: I was heading to the subway from Brooklyn when I found out while I was listening to the radio that the building fire disaster (bc I turned on my walkman around 10 AM) I was listening about and they did Not reiterate that it was The Towers - till both had collapsed. I ran back home, cried hard into my pillow then totally stopped.

It wasn't till I got to U2's first concert in NYC in sometime ? mid Oct (pre scheduled tour) that as soon as they walked on stage I burst into tears.First time I had cried from that original day. So grief, it can seem weird m, but it's usually nornal in how it manifests differently people]

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