Saturday November 6th - Find blogging helps

3 minute read time.

BEFORE YOU START READING I JUST WANT TO POINT OUT THAT I AM BLOGGING A LOT AT THE MOMENT BECAUSE I FIND IT HELPS ME TO SORT THINGS OUT THAT ARE RUNNING AROUND MY HEAD. SO DON'T FEEL OBLIGED TO READ THEM. WHEN I READ THEM BACK THEY ARE OFTEN LONG WINDED RANTS.

I had a terrible night last night.  I had been crying on and off all day but when I went to bed my sobbing became uncontrollable.  I was so loud I was worried Paul and Gillian would hear me next door.  If they did they haven't mentioned it.  It was after 1am when I went to sleep and I was awake by 6am.  I had eventually got to sleep with my head going over a lot of things about mum and woke up thinking about her.  Within minutes of being awake I was sobbing again, although maybe not quite so loudly.

I got up and had a shower and then spent the first part of the morning sitting around feeling sorry for myself.  Thomas arrived from his ice skating lesson around 10am, by which time knowing he was coming, I had pulled myself together.  I took him to his dance lesson at 11.30am but didn't go in with him as I didn't want to see Jo who works with me so I went to tesco and did a bit of shopping before collecting him.  As usual he was buzzing when he came out and I felt sad that the situation at work has forced me to cut myself off from friends there and has robbed me of the enjoyment I get out of watching Tom in his dance lesson on a Saturday morning.  It was the one thing I continued to do, and enjoy, right up until mum passed away.

I was going to take Tom home when we came back but he decided he'd like to spend the day with me, bless him.  When we got back we had a coffee (he thinks this is very grown up) and a cherry scone each and he told me all about his lesson where they had been dancing like zombies!  Later we watched Roald Daals 'The witches' and Kieran joined us for part of it.  I really enjoyed the time with my boys and it's lovely that even Tom, who is only 10, can sense my mood and spend time with me to cheer me up.  Naomi came and picked Tom up around 4pm as they are off to a bonfire party tonight.

Tonight I have been thinking again about my situation at work and occupational health.  I have had a lot of encouragement and advice from lots of different people but the one person who I would like advice from isn't here to give it and it hurts like hell!  Mum would have listened to what I had to say and then would have talked it all through with me.  She would have made me see it from both sides and would have given me advice on the best way forward. 

 I have a lot of good friends at work and have severed contact with them all because I don't feel it's fair to put them in the middle of what is going on but I wonder if mum had been here whether she would have told me not to cut myself off.  Would she have been able to suggest a way of staying in touch without it causing problems.  How I wish I could talk to her.  She has been the guiding light in my life for 49 years and I don't feel capable of making good decisions without her.  She was fiercely protective of me but also totally honest with me and would never side with me if she felt I was wrong. 

I know I'm a very stubborn person and can dig my heels in when I'm upset.  Very few people would think I was vulnerable and would see me as a very confident, and perhaps hard, individual.  When I feel threatened or scared I construct a brick wall and I won't let anyone over it or through it.  It's my self protection mechanism and it's maybe not always the best way to go.  When mum first passed away I consciously let people in but I'm aware that I have started to feel very protective of my grief and I don't want to share it with anyone.  When I'm faced with occupational health I can see myself putting up the wall and, as a result, may not do myself any favours.  At a time when I need my friends around me I know I'm pushing many of them away.  I feel completely lost, confused and disoriented at the moment but at least I can come on here and verbalise it which helps. 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Caroline,

    Sorry every thing is hurting just now, but honest Friends really do understand and we want to listen   We know you would be the first support us if we needed it - so stop beating yourself up please  !

    Take Care

    Love and Big Hugs

    J xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    HI Caroline, pm'd you earlier but have re-listed this here to help let you know that I feel your pain and the void you have just now xxxx

    My Grief

    Please don't try to tell me that you know just how I feel

    When I'm trying very hard, pretending none of this is real

    Please do not compare me to the girl who lives next door,

    Your friend's auntie or a cousin, and theres always many more.

    I know that you all mean well, but in my grief I am unique

    No one else can have these feelings, those I find so hard to speak

    I wish that I could tell you what my heart is trying to say

    I just know that I still stumble as I drift from day to day.

    Please don't try to tell me that time will heal my pain

    Just now I need to feel it, I don't want to laugh again.

    Please just sit and listen, I don't mean to be a bore

    I'm just trying to remember what my life was like before.

    I'm grateful for your presence, but I may not wish to talk

    My life is on a pathway that I never chose to walk.

    My dreams have all been shattered and my hopes been set adrift

    Though I never will forget, I know in time my mood will lift.

    Please don't turn your back on me, I need you to be strong

    You think that I am coping but look deep, you'll see you're wrong.

    Please don't judge, my grief is raw, just now I see no end

    But friends I need, true friends indeed, on that I will depend.

    by Sharonxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Sharon.  That is just so perfect.  Thank you XX

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Caroline, the way you are feeling is normal when you are giving for a loved one. The anger the feeling of  being  left behind to face the future without the one important person in your life that understood you better than anyone. You were very close to your mum and now the funeral is over its begun to hit you that she has gone. The time ahead is not going to be easy, just go with the flow, good days and bad days. You will never really get over your loss it just gets quieter, and you will find in time your pain will be easier to bare and your memories of the good times you and your mum had will make you smile again.

    With Love And Hugs

    Lucylee. xxxxxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi, Caroline

    First of all, my sincere condolences for your loss, and i should like to echo Lucylee's comments about the normality of your feelings - the new normality, that is. It is a situation that many of us have had to face, and in time it does become more bearable, although at the moment it won't seem like it. (I do 'brick walls' as well - every empathy with you on that one.)

    I also had to go through the occupational health thing - I had a lot of time off from my teaching job throughout my husband's illness and subsequent death)  and i have to say that they were incredibly supportive and  non- intrusive. Their main brief was to help me to  decide whether or not i was ready to return to work, and there was no pressure whatsoever, just concern and support. Counselling was offered but not pressed on me, and when i declined it was was not  mentioned again. They were not judgmental in any way, and I felt that they were genuinely acting in my interests. When I eventually returned to work, on a phased return, they kept in touch to see how it was going and how i felt about it all.

    i wish you well.

    Sue xx