My Dad

1 minute read time.

My dear Dad passed away on Sunday morning at home with my Mum, my sister and I with him.  We have spent the last three months caring for him after he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer mid July.  This last week has been a dreadful time for us we went to hell and back as Dad deterioated. I am not sure how we got through it, but we did with the help of hospice at home nurses and district nurses.  Have spent today organising the funeral which is next Monday.  I feel in a kind of zombie like state at the moment, not really crying or breaking down but I guess this is all quite normal at this stage? People keep telling me it probably wont hit me until after the funeral. My poor mum is so lost they had been married for 53 years and she cannot imagine a life without him, she keeps saying "why did he have to leave me, I cannot understand this dreadful disease". 

Pancreatic cancer is called the "silent killer"  it does not show itself until it is normally terminal, but believe me when I say it is definately not silent to those suffering with it and for those caring for someone with it.  It strips the person so quickly of who they are.  My Dad was a true gent, he loved his football and cricket, he loved playing table tennis and bowls, always on the go, loved his food and the company of people. This just took all his energy  and love of life so quickly that he was unable to enjoy any of this in his final few months. It is so cruel. I'm afraid I feel very bitter that it chose my Dad, I hate cancer and what it does to people, I know too many people that this dreadful disease has touched and I'm angry that research into cancer could not help my Dad or others like him.

I am sure over the coming weeks and months I will cry an ocean for my Dad he was the rock of our family and things will never be the same again.  Putting the pieces back together for my family will not be easy without him.

 

 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hello Carolyn

    Your story sounds so familiar. My dad was diagnosed with Pancreatic cancer in late May this year, after many tests failed to show any problems with him. The disease was brutal and he deteriorated so fast. He was a fit and healthy 64 year old, just coming up to retirement - loved by everyone, he really was the life and soul of the party, despite being tee-total. The cancer was relentless, he had no rest-bite, I was due to marry on the 26th July, this was a date he had set himself to reach. On the 12th i took him to get a new suit, as the one he had planned to wear was far too big for him now. It was the single most heartbreaking thing I have ever had to do, go into the changing rooms and help my dad put a suit on, over his rapidly thinning body, as we both realised he was losing a battle to be there on my big day. He passed away on the 19th, and we buried him on the 24th. The wedding still went ahead, he was adamant to us that it should, but the devastation of not having him there tore me apart - somehow I was strong and got through the day, but ever since I cry for him and miss him so so much. My wedding card was signed "from mum" which, like you say, was so painful.

    The seven weeks from diagnosis to him dying were hell for him, as not once did he have a 'good day' - it was one traumatic hospital visit after another, if he could keep down a yoghurt drink or we could get him to try a crossword it was a little victory for us.

    Pancreatic cancer of the type we have experienced is so devastating, it takes the person we knew and strips them of all life in such a short amount of time, it leaves you shell-shocked. there is no secret for getting over it, I still cry now but have also started to smile when i look through old photos of him. I know he would be so proud of me now as a married man, and the many happy memories we shared have started to blank out those last few awful awful months we had together.

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Simon,  he definately would be proud, the proudest Dad ever and what a great man he was to bring up a son that is so strong!  

    You are so right it does leave us shell-shocked, I don't think we ever get over it, how can you get over losing someone you love, I think we just learn to adjust our lives and live with it. Like you now I smile at his happy smiling face in photos, I have a wonderful one of him and my son, they both just beam happiness and love, and it makes me smile now not cry.  Don't get me wrong I still have very down days, like today taking down the christmas decorations, for some reason I just kept crying, I think its because I tried so hard not too over christmas, I just kept thinking at christmas if I cry I wont stop.

    I miss him every single day, so many things happen that I wish I could share with him.

    Happy memories do blank out the last awful weeks we had, hopefully one day they will blank them all out. My Dad would want that.

    Keep smiling Simon, smile through your tears, and keep making him proud.

    Carolyn