A difficult goodbye

It's been nearly a month since dad passed away. At the end of last year he had started getting pains in his stomach and back, and his gp thought it might be gall stones. After many months of appointments and a lot of pain, he was scheduled for surgery to have his gall bladder removed. We were all so relieved, finally he would have some relief from this agony that kept him up at night. I still struggle to understand how we got here from that optimistic point where we thought everything would be good for him again.

A couple of weeks before the surgery, dad started being sick all the time - huge amounts of vomit despite the fact that he couldn't face eating anything. Mum and I took him to hospital and little did we know that he would never leave. A week later he was diagnosed with metastatic cancer of the gall bladder - which I have found out since is a very rare and usually undetectable type of cancer until the last stages. There was talk of chemo eventually but dad spent the last two months of his life unable to eat, so he lost a huge amount of weight and was too weak to have any cancer treatment. The doctors made it clear that it wasn't curable but could be treatable in the future if dad regained his strength. Mum and I clung on to hope despite the fact that the doctors had told us there was nothing more they could do at that point. He had been in hospital 6 weeks at this point, and diagnosed for 5.

One weekend, suddenly it all went terribly wrong. Dad went from one day being amazingly bright and positive, to being delirious and barely able to open his eyes the next. I alerted the doctors to how much he had changed and they took mum and me aside to explain that he might have an infection he can't fight off, or it might just be the cancer progressing. We braced ourselves for the worst. 48 hours later, after spending the majority of the time with an oxygen mask on, dad passed away being held by his nurse, while mum and I stood back and watched in horror. It all happened with a matter of seconds - one minute he was fine and holding my hand, the next he had a spell of vomiting (as he had been doing for weeks) and then he was gone. He was 52 years old. It was exactly two months between the day he was diagnosed and the day he passed away, from pneumonia. I think cancer is often not the cause of death but is the reason for the cause.

I still haven't adjusted to what life could possibly be for me and my family without dad around. He was a good man, he didn't deserve to go but then I suppose no one ever deserves this horrible disease. I suppose it is a blessing that he didn't have to go through the grueling treatment, but he spent most of his time in a lot of pain and getting control of that was all that mattered to him in the end. The stress that my mum went through, and that I went through, was exhausting and horrible, and I suppose now we can have some peace knowing that he is at peace. He knows we love him so much, and I spend a lot of nights lying awake thinking about how unfair it is that he was taken away and now my mum doesn't have her husband. Im 22 and I will spend the rest of my life without without a dad. Grief is so painful, it's hard to imagine that so many people are affected by it every second of every day. My heart goes out to all of you, and if my dad's experience has taught me anything, its that you should always live for now - we have no idea what's around the corner. 

Love you so much dad, you made us very proud.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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    I am so very sorry for the passing of your father and for your mums passing of her husband and at such a relatively young age.

    Your whole family must be devastated and still in shock. 

    I know all about grief and the death of a parent, my mum died when I was 11 and my dad died (similar to yours in 2011.

    I can't advise you or show you the way forward but I can say I know your dad has gone to his next home and although he isn't with you  physically,  he is with you spiritually. Ask for signs from him. My dad had a n 80' song played at his funeral and then a week later it was on TV as an song on a commercial....I asked dad for a sign and the song started playing. To me, I think that he was here before I arrived and now he has gone  before me.

    This is how I cope, you too shall find your way, allow your tears to fall, ask for help from universe and friends 

    Keep moving forward in your life knowing that when its your turn to take the next step your dad will be there waiting for you, like he was when you came here to earth xxx

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Dear 5678,

    I am so sorry for your lose. I lost my Dad on 1st July 2015 it was much the same as your Dad. Dad had been feeling ill since the end of may. dad had blood test, scans and all sorts at no point did anyone mention the C word. We run Dad up to A & E three times due to pains in his back and the doctor even said in the last visit... don't worry it's nothing terrible. They gave Dad a back xray and said he had some cracked vertebrae  and that these could be pinned. All very positive . The next morning we had a consultant at Dads bedside stating he was a cancer specialist and was given only 72 hours with our Dad due to spine cancer. That was on 11th June. dads was a very rare aggressive cancer and undetectable.

    We managed to get my Dad home and have a blissful week so much so we started to question if the doctors got it wrong! But then it happened, Dad went down hill very quickly and slipped into a coma. Dad died at 69 with his family around him.

    Please take comfort that you were able to say goodbye and how much you loved each other. I know it's difficult and you feel cheated and why did this happen to our sweet harmless Dads. I am still very much in denial that my Dad has gone and still when the phone rings I expect it to be him and walking into my mum and dads house I want him to be there.

    Watching my dad die was hell on earth, but some beautiful words were spoken and expressed between us. My dad last kiss he gave me just means the world to me! 

     

    Coming to terms with the shock will take time. Have you been offered any bereavement counselling at all?

    My thoughts are will you and your family

    Xxxx

  • Thank you for your kind words, and I'm very sorry for your loss. I take comfort in reading the stories of others and knowing that there is light at the end of this dark time. 

    The day after my dad passed away, my mum, boyfriend d and I were driving to see his parents. A song came on the radio that I had always thought of as mine and dad's song - we used to sing it together when I was small. I dont think I have ever heard it played on the radio until that day. I took it as a sign from him that he is OK and he is with me always. 

     

  • I am sorry for your loss too. I always imagined advanced cancer as a drawn out thing with treatment cycles and x amount of years to live - before now I had never thought of cancer creeping up so suddenly and without warning. Like you, there was no mention of it until very late in the day. At the beginning I couldnt comprehend that there might only be a couple of years left for him - let alone two months.

    The outpouring of love and care from dad's friends and relatives has been a huge comfort in this time. I hope that he knew how much he meant to so many people.  I suppose all I can do is carry him with me and live my life in a way that would make him proud. And one day I'll see him again, wrap my arms around him and fill him in on everything he missed - even if he had been watching the whole time.

  • Until that time Hun.....if you are ever worried, at a cross road in life look up and ask yourself what would your dad say or what would he have done.

    This has been helping me through:-

    Grief is like an ocean; It comes in waves, ebbing and flowing. Sometimes the water is calm and sometimes its overwhelming. All we can do is learn to swim.

    Xxxx

  • dear 5678 sorry for your loss of your dad, i lost my dad at just fourty seven due to a unexpected heart attack,when i was 19, then last december on the 27th i lost my mum of seventy four due to ovarian cancer which we did not know she had till it was too late, when we took her into  hospital i did not know she would only last three weeks, she went through hell she could not eat , she could not move of the bed and was sick every day for which they could not stop,while in hospital they drained four bags of horrible brown fluid which contained cancer cells, they could not offer her any treatment because the dam cancer had spread up to her neck,they say ovarian cancer is a silent killer, because you do not get any symptoms untill it has already advanced and i read they have not got any early dectection screening for it yet, they say its hard to detect in its early stages its like what the hell are you suppoed to do its  like mum had no chance, but mum sufferd alot while she was in hospital, and i can take comfort that she is no longer in pain .she was already inin remission from early stage breast cancer since 2011,but cancer seems to always win a way back,take care oggi

  • Hi Oggi,

    It sounds like you went through an awful time with both of your parents, and I'm truly sorry for your loss. When my dad had been told he was terminal he said to the doctor, is it selfish for me to want to die and no longer be in this pain despite the fact that it will hurt my family, or is it my family who are selfish for expecting me to carry on like this? And what he said was so true - I wanted him to recover and come back from every little setback, even though I knew he was in pain, because I couldnt face the idea of him dying. But now he is no longer in pain, and I could see from his face that he was at peace - he looked just like he did when he slept. 

    Nothing will ever give me back my dad but I will appreciate the 22 years I had with him, and I will remember him for the brilliant man that he was. Cancer, especially the rare forms that go undetected, are so awful but I suppose we have to be thankful that my dad and your mum's suffering didn't go on for months or years, and they passed away knowing how much their family loved them.