I lost my dad in 2018

FormerMember
FormerMember
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Hi everyone, I'm 21 years old and I lost my dad on 27th October 2018. Sorry this is quite a long one!

My dad was diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukaemia  in Spring 2016 whilst I was in my last year of school. He went into remission a couple of times, had countless rounds of chemo, was in hospital in isolation for months on end and even tried out a medical trial. In late August 2018 he was no longer able to receive chemo as it would be far too harsh on his body and would end up killing him, and it would also not benefit him as he was now incurable. So he was offered a new drug (I can't remember the name, I've blurred a lot of stuff out). This would be given through fortnightly injections but it would help on a sort of palliative basis and he was still healthy and doing everything he liked doing, walks etc. 

In early October he was beginning to feel the effects of the drugs - we had be told it would be similar side effects to the chemo he had received over the last 2 years. He was tired a lot and even walking up the stairs to the toilet would cause him to be breathless. He decided that the next round of injections would be the last as he couldn't cope with living like this. on Thursday 18th October he decided to have an early night because he felt unwell and tired. Again, we were naive and thought this was side effects hitting him. He never got up out his bed, only for going to the toilet which was a struggle. Over that weekend he had a couple of toilet accidents and went for a bath, but couldn't get out the bath so my mum and my next door neighbour had to lift him out the bath. We contacted his doctor who said just to let him rest and he was just feeling the side effects.

On Monday 22nd October, I had been working and came home at 10pm. Around 10.15, my mum and I heard a massive thud in the toilet. My dad had collapsed in the toilet but he'd locked the door. I phoned an ambulance and my mum phoned my sister to come over to try and help unlock the door. My sister is a nurse - she managed to get the door unlocked and looked at him and the symptoms he was having and said she thought he had sepsis. The paramedics came in and helped my dad up and confirmed he was in septic shock. He was confused, upset and didn't recognise us now

He was taken to hospital and I contacted my other siblings to come. Over the next few hours new waited and waited, no one telling us what was happening. Around 2am, we were allowed to see him. He was sitting up in his bed, conscious but completely unaware of where he was or who we were. Around 8am, his doctor confirmed he was in septic shock and also had pneumonia. He was taken to High Dependency. However, he got progressively sicker and was moved to ICU. This was Tuesday evening. Over the next few days, it was a rollercoaster of emotions. He couldn't breathe without oxygen being given to him as his levels were very low and they were going to ventilate him but this was then scrapped because they didn't think he'd wake up. He also couldn't eat but they couldn't put a feeding tube in because his blood wasn't clotting so he could bleed out. On the Thursday evening/Friday morning things were looking a bit hopeful because he was breathing fine on his own and even managed a few spoonfuls of soup, and seemed to recognise us. We went home on Friday feeling hopeful. On Saturday, we were started losing our hope because he had to be put on oxygen again. He had a few rigors and then fell unconscious during the day. Around 6pm that night, the consultant took us into the family room and told us there was now nothing they could do for my dad. He wasn't going to wake up from his sleep as he was too sick. He told us they were going to remove the machines and oxygens, give him painkillers and make him as comfortable as possible. 

We went into his room in ICU, and all the machines had been taken away. He was lying, sound asleep and looked so peaceful. My mum, my 3 sisters, my brother and I sat round his bed and talked to him, sang to him, cried over him. A minister came and did a prayer with us and he as religious. We waited and waited and over the next couple of hours we knew it would happen soon. At 11.14pm on 27th October 2018, my dad passed away.

I can't even remember how I felt over the next few days. I felt numb and couldn't cry. I went back to uni the day after his funeral and through myself into trying to complete my degree as a student teacher. I was told by my uni if I didn't go back by a certain date I'd have to repeat the year and I couldn't bring myself to do that. Since then I had been at uni every day then work all weekend. My family are all very close and my boyfriend and friends are supportive but I just can't talk to anyone. I am now in the last 4 months of my degree and I feel like its suddenly hitting me that my dad is dead. I can't concentrate on anything, I am extremely angry all the time, causing unnecessary arguments. I have no motivation to do anything. I feel like I have a massive hole in my heart and everything reminds me of my dad. I was driving the other day and was looking at the colour of the sunset and it made me cry to the point I had to pull over my car because I was sobbing so much because my dad would have liked the sunset. I am on Fluoxetine and Propanolol for depression and anxiety. I have also tried counselling but hated it so much. I don't know how to cope with this anymore because it is so overwhelming and so, so unfair. 

Thank you for reading this. Any help is appreciated at all!

xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hello; I'm so sorry.  Don't worry about the length of the message - you needed to describe what happened.  This must have been awful for you to experience. I can relate to the anger having lost my dad - and the way something can just bring you to tears completely out of the blue.

    I read in the Guardian a few months ago about support groups specifically for people who'd lost parents at a young age.  I've just had a search but can't find anything on their website but you might find the article helpful- if you contact their website they might be able to find the link.  I'm guessing if there was anything like this at your university, then you'd have come across this by now.  Hope this helps a bit.  R x 

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    My mother was diagnosed in 2016 and passed away on November 23, 2018 so very similar timelines. I just thought that after I went through the being so numb I couldn't cry stage after her death, I went through a period of time where I felt like I was just bouncing through life with no real goal. Then a couple things in life happened together that caused me to change. First, a local quilt group finished quilting a quilt that my mother had made and decided since it was her last one, to gift it to me. It really meant a lot to me. Second, I got some notices in the mail for events that my mother liked to participate in. One of those was a cancer walk and it reminded me of the time in a previous year when my mother had stood on that stage after the walk with other people with cancer or cancer survivors and seemed so happy to be in the presence of others like her that were staying strong. I signed up and did that walk in my mother's honor last year and have signed up again this year. 

    Both of those things though made me realize that my mother wouldn't have wanted me to sit around and mourn her or to be angry at what she has missed. She would have wanted me to go on through life and to be proud at the things I have accomplished. I took that to heart and now focus on doing things to honor my mother. I am putting together a photo album and scrapbook of my mother's life to give to my children when they are older. I am writing stories of my mother and her family in a book to give to them as well. I have taken up some of the things my mother did to make others happy and am now doing them myself. 

    I still miss of her and think of her everyday. Whenever I unlock my phone, her picture is the first thing I see. But I am more at peace with a life without her presence because I was with her long enough to know when she would have been proud of me and knowing she would have been smiling at something I told her or did. She is still in my life.