Monthly Archives: June 2015

100 days an angel

Standard

Saturday 20th June

One hundred days ago you gained your Angel wings and left us to fly to heaven. The complete unexpectedness of your departure threw us into the depths of despair.

It’s been hard. It’s been really hard to face the world without you. But every morning we try. We have to. For ourselves, for our younger son, and for you. We have so much to remember. So many amazing memories of your thirty years.

Today your Nan and Auntie came to visit with you. The cemetery was so calm and peaceful, with the sun shining down, and your flowers looking colourful and fresh. As the breeze rustled through the tall trees, your Auntie said it sounded as though everyone here was whispering to one another. All friends together, seeking solace.

Nan became a little upset as she touched your simple wooden cross. I do hope you knew she was there. We all loved you so very much, you touched each and every one of our lives with your uniqueness of being.

Fly free, soar so high, and know we will never, ever, forget you.
Never.
You hold such a special place in all our hearts.
And that’s where you are now, safe within our hearts.

Love you forever Angel xxxx

Sorry, feeling a bit miserable today

Standard

Thursday 18th June

Thursday. Fourteen weeks ago today. And I still remember everything as if it were yesterday.

Our grief feels so intense, so overwhelming and to us, right now, permanent.
We not only lost our son, but over the years he became our best friend too, our companion.
He was the focus of our lives, with immense emotional investment, and now what is left?
Now we are left with just utter futility and desolation.
All the chemotherapy treatment he had to go through, to be told it was doing its job, everything would turn out fine. It seems so empty now.
Everything we put into bringing up our son, now seems to have been for nothing.
Our daily, weekly, yearly routine has been changed forever.
We have lost future adventures and future hopes.
This is a most devastating loss, the saddest thing we’ve ever had to deal with.
We feel an incredible sense of numbness, the reality of his passing is hitting us hard.

We need a return to a sense of purpose, even though living the rest of our lives without our son seems unthinkable right now.
We just have to learn to cope, a little more, day by day.
We need to take time out. It is difficult for our brain to work when our heart is broken.

Life will not be the same again, it will be different. But it will go on.
And we have to take the memories with us, celebrate the thirty years that we had with our son.
We will continue to think about him every day, visit his grave, and talk with him.
We loved him dearly, and will continue to do so for the rest of our lives.

Night night lovely boy xxxx

Graveside conversations

Standard

Monday 15th June

For quite some while now we have been pondering over one of your neighbours. You see, their cross is at the ‘other end’ of their grave. We did think it a little strange, even your brother thought it had sinister connotations.

Well, today the mystery has been solved. We struck up a conversation with a couple who had come to tend that grave. The man I spoke with was a vicar, and he explained the reasoning behind the placement of the wooden cross. We were told that the gentleman laid to rest was a priest, (his name was Freddy)

Almost all the bodies in the cemetery lie with their heads to the West, and feet to the East.

However, an ordained member of the clergy is traditionally buried in the opposite orientation. This is so that, on the Day of Judgement, at the Resurrection, they may rise, facing, ready to minister to their people.

So there we have it, nothing sinister at all. You are in good company.

We also learnt from the vicar that the area of the cemetery where you are, has been blessed by a Bishop, so that it is consecrated ground. Over the roadway, where many more graves are located, is the unconsecrated ground. I think you would have been pleased to be in the ‘posh’ place. You certainly did like your posh travels, upper class hotels, and first rate service on holidays.

The vicar wanted to know all about you, and your life. He was genuinely interested in all you had accomplished, your education, your travels, your hobbies.

I told the vicar that we visit you every day, sometimes just to be near you, or to talk with you. He told me that you would know we were close by, and that you could hear us. Your spirit is with us forever.

I felt comforted by the chat I had today with the vicar. He said whenever he visited Freddy, he would take the time to say ‘Hello’ to you as well.

Sweet dreams my darling Angel son.
xxxx

image

Sunny Sunday

Standard

Sunday 14th June

Late morning we drive over to collect my mum from the care home, take her to lunch and do a bit of shopping, meeting up with my sister, too.

As it is a warm, sunny day, we then go on to have afternoon tea at a lovely sculpture garden. My mum enjoys being outdoors, but her back is paining her, and she walks slowly, stooped, with a stick. There are many weird and wonderful plants on show, the succulents and cacti are really fascinating.

Late afternoon and we come to the cemetery to visit you. You would have enjoyed today, seeing your Nan and Auntie, and being out in the fresh air. You would have wandered all over the place, exploring the woodland paths.

We miss you so very much.
Every day.
Every waking moment.
Even whilst asleep.
In our dreams.
We miss you.

We talk about you all the time, as if somehow you are enjoying the same things that we do. As if you are walking beside us all the time.
You are in our hearts, in our minds, in our souls. Your spirit is with us always.

And yet.
Because we cannot see you, nor touch you.
We just miss you.

We love you so very much xxx

Forever loved

Standard

Saturday 13th June

Lost. That’s the only way to describe how I’m feeling right now. My life is lost without you; it has no real purpose at the moment.

We did spend time this morning at your graveside, changing all the flowers, brightening up a dull and grey day. At least two aeroplanes could be heard overhead, and we imagined you on-board, off on a sunny, fun holiday. We couldn’t see the planes today though, as the clouds were thick and heavy with misty rain. We talk awhile, and mention the dream that your brother’s girlfriend had, about seeing you. I so wish we could see you know, and hear you laugh and listen to your voice.

I go to close your bedroom curtains tonight, as I always do, and stop a while to look at your bed: the Care Bears and dolphin lying on the pillows and duvet, and I realise you’ll never snuggle there again.

And it makes me so sad. And lost.
Where do we go from here?
How are we to find our way out of this awful situation?

We are lost without you.
We love you forever.
Sweet Angel child xxxx

Dinner and a Dream

Standard

Friday 12th June

We are invited to my younger son and his girlfriend’s place this evening for dinner. Lovely to chat, reminisce, eat and drink. It feels good to have company on a Friday night.

Just before we eat, our son’s girlfriend tells us of a dream she had last night. She dreamt she saw our elder son, and he told her to tell his brother that he was all right, that he was happy, and that he laughed so joyfully. That made me cry. Happy and sad at the same time.

Fly high my cheerful Angel.
Soar on your wings and giggle.
Smile whilst looking down upon us.

We love you so dearly.
Forevermore xxxx

A meeting with the oncologist ~ finally

Standard

Thursday 11th June

Finally we have been granted a meeting with our son’s oncologist to discuss his death. It’s been exactly thirteen weeks, or ninety one days since he passed away, (almost as long as his chemotherapy treatment). We spent about an hour and a half with the consultant. It was emotional, draining and most upsetting. I think I was looking for answers, for reasons, knowledge about what went so drastically wrong for our son.

But I didn’t really come away feeling any better. What had happened was extremely rare, unbelievable bad luck, a catastrophic disaster: without any preceding symptoms, no clues as to such a significant problem that would prove fatal.

Nothing was foreseen that could have prevented the outcome. Our son took his treatment in his stride, and he was told by all the medical staff how well he was doing, and how much his tumours had shrunk. He was getting well. We were all making plans for the future.

And now we’ve lost our future, without warning. It’s as if we had been lying to him all the time. He trusted us implicitly and went along with everything thrown at him.

Looking back, the oncologist said he would not have changed anything about the treatment that was delivered. Whether reducing the dosage, or stopping altogether. The various cytotoxins were doing their job in reducing the size of the tumours. Without any other symptoms, apart from the recognised sickness, tiredness and mouth ulcers, everything pointed to an eventual success. Nothing else could have been done, or done differently to save our son.

A gastric ulcer was the cause of death, quite possibly caused by high steroid treatment, along with the brutal chemotherapy regime. A massive upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage resulted in three pints of blood flooding the stomach, and causing cardiac arrhythmia. Had the ulcer been a few millimetres to the left or right of a blood vessel, that obviously erupted, then the outcome would have been so very different. That the end of life was most likely instantaneous and pain free is the only comfort we can take from this.

That it had taken the consultant oncologist thirteen weeks to meet with us, is most unacceptable. He had been e-mailed three times by our GP requesting a meeting, before it actually came about.

I do still have so much anger, hurt, pain, doubts, regrets: so many negative feelings and dark thoughts, that I just don’t know how to climb out of this depression that seems to be enveloping me. I feel so much despair and utter desolation.

Looking back, and wondering whether our son’s regular ‘Well Man Medical Check-Ups’ could have, should have highlighted the problem sooner, I don’t know. Should teenage boys/young men with learning disabilities be made more aware of testicular cancer, taught to check for lumps in their testicles, and talk with parents or carers about this sometimes ‘taboo’ subject? And there lies the stumbling block. Communication, especially with strangers, or those seen to be in authority, is extremely difficult for those with autism, and for those with other mental health problems, too. Yes, I definitely believe that awareness should be made much more of a priority. Testicular cancer is not an old man’s disease, but most often diagnosed in males aged between 15 and 35 years. Our son was thirty, and I’m sure he had no idea or any knowledge of testicular cancer. Had it been caught early, our son would still be here with us now.

I would really like, somehow, to raise awareness of this awful disease, especially in young men with learning difficulties. I’m not sure yet how to begin, but it is something I do feel passionately about.

I don’t want his thirty years to be all in vain.

Thirteen weeks, or ninety one days, and we’ve cried every single day.

Love you forever, Angel xxxx