The Front Porch Swing

It's a bit of a rough weekend for us.

My family in Holland scattered my mom's ashes yesterday.. She passed away last June. A long story, bare with me.

My mother-in-law passed away this very weekend, a year ago.

She'd been living in a nursing home for years.. her will to live had been gone for ages. She refused to get out of bed. Would eat junk food her family sent her, even though she had diabetes and was horribly overweight.... it was hard to see. We had just moved her to a new nursing home, the previous one was not taking proper care of her and she'd gotten sick a few times there. Her room had mold and water damage there... and the food was just terrible.

We moved her to a much nicer nursing home. She had to share a room though, as it was a pricier nursing home and Medicare would only cover a shared room. She was MAD at first, she didn't like change.. but we told her that we hoped she would try and get out of bed and maybe try and use a wheelchair and participate in some activities, for the sake of her grandkids. We told the nurses she needed a little tough love.

Not two weeks later we got a call that they found her unconcious, blue and unresponsive, after they went to check on her roommate (a lady who needed around the clock care). They managed to get her back after CPR. The nurses told us she'd been doing better and actually had been sitting on the edge of her bed, trying to get up and in a wheelchair..

She was rushed to the hospital, but they did not know how long she had been deprived of oxygen... so they did not know if recovery was even possible. She spent several days on life support in the MICU and after much agonizing and speaking to a chaplain and praying for guidance, my husband decided to take her off. She was moved to a private room for her final moments. Ofcourse, his mom was a STUBBORN woman
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, and she did not pass away as expected. She actually lived for hours after taking her off, vitals barely dropping. We stayed with her through out the night. The nurses urged us to go home and sleep, we had our one year old with us and he'd been sleeping on the sofa in the room, while we sat with my mother-in-law. My husband spoke to her, said it was ok for her to go. We laughed and talked to her, telling her we knew she was stubborn (she was well aware of this and always claimed it with pride). We let our son sleep on her bed with her for a while, like he had done before.

After we went home, in the early morning hours, we got a call maybe two hours later. Her vitals were dropping rapidly. We rushed back, but she had passed before we made it back. Not surprising, she was a proud woman who likely would not have wanted her son to be there as she passed.

We made her final arrangements and I asked my mother if she would come to the funeral, as she had known my mother-in-law and this would provide a chance for her to meet all of my in-laws. She had planned to visit in October, but this would work out for her as well... she somehow managed to arrange a flight and fly in the very next day (from Holland). Everything happens for a reason, I fully believe this.

She stayed for three weeks, enjoying time with her grandchildren. We spoke about life and death.. and we came at peace, which was sort of odd. We always had a bit of a rocky relationship... but we were starting to see eye to eye more, both moms now... I had changed, I suppose.

During the last weekend of her stay she got ill. She already had a host of illnesses, COPD one of them, so we were used to her coughing and wheezing. The next day she had a fever and felt worse, she stayed in bed and I gave her some medicine... that night she was coughing up blood and sweating profusely, wheezing and shivering... I rushed her to the ER. Her oxygen level was 74%!

After several hours she was diagnosed with pnuemonia and I told her she'd be good as new in no time. I stayed with her until dawn, then they said they were going to keep her another day and I told her not to worry. She urged me to go home, get some sleep. I told the doctors to call me if they needed me, her English was pretty minimal and she would need me to translate if they wanted to communicate. I went home, slept a few hours and came back with some of her things for her. She couldn't talk because she had a mask on with breathing treatment. I was going to stay a while, but she urged us to just go home, she's fine, going to rest etc. I again urged the nurses that they need to call me if they need to communicate with her, because her English is very minimal.

Then we went home...

That night the hospital called. Her oxygen levels just wouldn't get high enough, so they were going to sedate her and put her on a ventilator for a day or two, so her lungs could heal. But, not to worry.

The next day she was in MICU... the room across the one my mother-in-law was in only a month ago. And from there it just got worse... pnuemonia became stapph... stapph became MRSA... What was supposed to be 'just a day or so' became 'We're trying to wake her, but she's not waking up'.... I drove her to the ER on Monday, on Saturday she passed away. The MRSA had ravaged her already weakened lungs, moved to her brain... her kidneys... everything.

I still have trouble accepting the situation... I was mad at the hospital, it seemed they weren't as cautious with MRSA as they should have been... and it seemed they downplayed the situation. I kept getting different answers from different doctors. They whole situation was just insane....

I told the nurses that we had lost my mother-in-law only weeks before, in the same ward. They couldn't believe it.

Strangely enough, my mom had said in the ER "If something happens, I don't want to go back to Europe"... I think she knew. She was swimming with us... working in the garden.. only day before she got sick. She was an active woman, despite her health issues.. I didn't see it coming. Ofcourse, the family didn't agree and her body was flown back to Europe. We tried to arrange for us to go to her funeral, but we couldn't afford it, nor was it possible to get travel papers in such a short amount of time. My oldest brother told me that doctors in the Netherlands adviced against us traveling, since we had been exposed to MRSA... but I think he was scared of it, his wife was 8 months pregnant... So I did not get to go to the funeral. Kind of glad. My mom HATED the idea of a funeral. She didn't want flowers when she was dead, she wanted them while she was alive. She wasn't on good terms with her family, yet all came to her funeral. A funeral she didn't want in the first place...... I suppose they needed it for closure, but it was not respecting her last wishes, for sure.

And now, her ashes have been scattered. Again with all her family there.. people she had pushed away so many times.

My mom had a lot of mental issues... something that caused our relationship to be a bit rocky. Many times I had to be the adult, even though she did not see that.. she made some bad decisions... and made life hard for me and my little brother. She had been suicidal at different times in her past.. the last time she had set the house on fire with my brother in it (he had become mentally ill over the last years, something I cannot help but think may have been caused by our youth). He was arrested, as the cops thought he did it, even though he was putting the fire out. My mom had some minor burns in her face.. my brother on the other hand wents through very rough treatment by police. I felt very bad for him, he had become intensely fearful of going outside, even phonecalls... and here he was drug to jail, strip searched, interrogated etc. I was in the US, so there was nothing I could do. My mom was admitted to a mental hospital, but escaped.. Janked her IV out and just walked out..... Police were dredging rivers and stuff... apparently she finally made it home and they decided to just keep her in the house and my brother spent two days sleeping in front of her door, to keep her in her room...... Screwed up stuff. She wasn't allowed to travel to the US for two years due to that little stunt. It's only one example.... she made life tough on us kids... but she taught us a lot too.....

I miss her, even though I have hated her at times... Life is so weird and screwed up. SO many times she wanted to die, and as she was finally recovering, finally straightening out, coming to peace.. she dies.

I worry about my brother, he just turned 29, but he's just a kid. He lives in a sort of half-way home... It's a group home. He has no money at all.. he has had some issues with drugs. He used to be 'normal', and one day he just snapped. He couldn't leave the house, heard voices, became suicidal, just terrified of the world. Not sure what happened, just one day he couldn't function anymore. He didn't shower for a year, stopped shaving, stopped caring for himself. He didn't leave his room unless my mom made him (she didn't know what to do with him... toxic situation, which is why she decided to set the house on fire with him in it
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). He's doing better now, he works parttime.. my older brother is looking out for him some. I feel bad, I wish I could do SOMETHING for him.. My older brother hates me because I moved to the US, but I had to get out of there... my mom was toxic for all of us. I used to have nightmares about her... sometimes still do, and I'm 31!

*sigh*

Venty vent vent.

Mother's day is not a happy day for me... it should be, I have two little kiddos I love. I'm a happy adult, I am a miserable child. Maybe some day I can let my past go. I love the present, I love the future, I hate the past..
 
Venty vent vent.

Mother's day is not a happy day for me... it should be, I have two little kiddos I love. I'm a happy adult, I am a miserable child. Maybe some day I can let my past go. I love the present, I love the future, I hate the past..
Maybe, my friend, you are a happy adult because you were a miserable child. I know that sounds convoluted, but we each cope with things differently. Our daughter had a good, solid, stable and loving home, but has never known a happy time since she was 12 years old. As a consequence both of her children ended up being raised by the very parents she resented and blamed. Our son and older daughter, raised in the same home, are solid, strong adults with terrific families of their own. I was stunned one day when Tammy explained that growing up with such chaos taught her that a quiet, peaceful, God-fearing home was her goal, and her brother agreed. They took the experience of living with a mentally ill sibling and used it to make themselves and their children's lives better.

I think that's what you did. You had two choices....you could stay where you were and let the chaos around you taint the rest of your life or you could get out and make a better life. You, your children and your husband have benefited from the lessons you had to learn the hard way. Oh, sure, you can beat yourself up with guilt. But why? Does it change anything? Does it help your family? I tell my kids that they are rings in a pond. When the rock of faith is dropped in the center, the first ring created is their family circle. The second outer ring is their parents and siblings. The third ring is their grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins - each outward ring is another link in their extended family until the farthest rings represent nothing more than people who never touch their lives intimately. The only ring they need to be concerned with is that first one created by their faith - their ring. The rest make the pond's surface a little nicer to look at but each ring gets farther away from the center. They need to focus on the center.

Rather than focus on what you didn't do, and on what your older brother's feelings about your leaving are, focus on the fact that for the first time in her life your mom knew peace and joy and laughter. And she got that from your little circle, not from the outer rings. In return, your mom's special gift to you was compassion for someone with special needs, a strong sense of family, and the strength to know that you deserved something better. That, my dear friend, is something that should bring you peace and joy. And you are doing something for your younger brother, even if it you can't see it. You are breaking the cycle of mistrust, pain, and chaos. You are showing him that just out his reach, but nearer than it was before, is what life can be. And from where I sit, it sounds like you are doing that very well indeed.
 
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Holidays are getting bad for me too. For one I dont celebrate many anymore for various reasons. Most Mothers Days I bought fresh plants for my yard and helped a friend add more to her yard. Last year was my first here away from my two oldest and alone without hubby. I wanted to go to the only American store I had found here and look for some hinges to repair my kitchen cabinets. I waited all afternoon for my son to take me. Finally he was ready but I got downstairs and was told he only had an hour to take me cause he had something else to do and I had to wait gor him to tske my mil and sil to her parents house. Well I was livid and I told him I could walk cause I wasnt being rushed on my day. 8 miles each way but I found what I needed but tried to blow off steam so I would not stay angry. My 3rd daughter was born on Mothers Day so she is always my gift, like my 2nd and 4th daughters were born on Fathers Day.
Today I was mixed emotions, missing my son, my daughters birthday coming up and my oldest daughters now half a world away. Another day im depressed with my situation with my husband and trying to remind myself as always thereare others worse off, I should be thankful.
Took a bracelet to the gold shop today, my husband bought it for me when I had my first son. I had planned on giving it to his wife when I was blessed with a grandchild, but that will never happen now. My other son could care less for marriage. I want to trade it for a wedding set traditionally worn by married women which I have yet to own. I have 4 "Urdays" but no jewelry to wear with them. Typically you get your first set when you marry but they are not available in the USA and he kept promising me when we returned "home" I would get mine. The man at the gold shop said my braclet was worth 1500 and he could get me a set of 12 pieces for 300. The rest of the money I could put away or invest in other gold pieces. My daughters could care less about jewelry and traditional clothes but its my dream.
The market is open tomorrow maybe I will find a rosebush for myself. After years of sinus problems I can finally smell flowers again and im working on building my flower collection.
May each of you take from each day the memories good and bad, they are what shapes us. Pass the good ones on and let the bad find a place to be forgiven in our hearts.
 
@Tomtommom... I great big hug to you. Mother's Day, Father's Day, Christmas and a lot of other "days" are not a joyful time to a whole lot of people. You are not alone. You do know that none of that was your fault, right? Really you never know what another person has gone through to cause them to act the way they do. There can also be medical or mental issues beyond their control that causes them to be impossible. I know it is hard to forgive but that is as much for you as it is for them. Bitterness and resentment are poison to your soul - I know. I'm glad you broke the cycle and good for you on getting out of it all. God bless you and your family.
 
Blooie, today you have made me laugh, cry and have hope in my current situation. I am not the only one you have touched here.. I have never had close women friends. I have found most of the people I have considered "friends" quickly disappear when times get tough. Thank you. I feel privileged to be your friend. A little background. I was just 18 when I became pregnant with my first child. Unmarried but dating her father. My family were strict Catholics and completely freaked out. Her father told me he wanted nothing to do with her and took me to Mexico with the intention of forcing me to have an abortion. I refused and came home. She was born on Christmas Day in 1965. I decided to place her for adoption. That move broke my heart but was the best thing I could have done for her. She was adopted by a wonderful family. She found me when she was in her early 30's when some medical issues came up. We had a beautiful reunion. Madi, my granddaughter, was just 2 years old. She had problems even as a baby with tantrums, and communication. My daughter did her best, but probably should have gotten her some help. I lost track of them for several years and through facebook we reconnected and I found I had two beautiful granddaughters. They are both so different. Madi has always been an introvert and Jayla is into dance, pageantry , cheer etc. She has always been the star. I really think Madi, like your granddaughter, really needs to be the star for awhile out of her sister's limelight. My husband and I are willing to put everything on hold to get her here and give her a chance to shine. I know she can do it if we can
convince her to try. Again thank you for all the encouragement. Now out to help hubby build more fence to try and capture our wayward cow!
Happy Mother's Day all.
Deb W
 
Blooie, today you have made me laugh, cry and have hope in my current situation. I am not the only one you have touched here.. I have never had close women friends. I have found most of the people I have considered "friends" quickly disappear when times get tough. Thank you. I feel privileged to be your friend. A little background. I was just 18 when I became pregnant with my first child. Unmarried but dating her father. My family were strict Catholics and completely freaked out. Her father told me he wanted nothing to do with her and took me to Mexico with the intention of forcing me to have an abortion. I refused and came home. She was born on Christmas Day in 1965. I decided to place her for adoption. That move broke my heart but was the best thing I could have done for her. She was adopted by a wonderful family. She found me when she was in her early 30's when some medical issues came up. We had a beautiful reunion. Madi, my granddaughter, was just 2 years old. She had problems even as a baby with tantrums, and communication. My daughter did her best, but probably should have gotten her some help. I lost track of them for several years and through facebook we reconnected and I found I had two beautiful granddaughters. They are both so different. Madi has always been an introvert and Jayla is into dance, pageantry , cheer etc. She has always been the star. I really think Madi, like your granddaughter, really needs to be the star for awhile out of her sister's limelight. My husband and I are willing to put everything on hold to get her here and give her a chance to shine. I know she can do it if we can
convince her to try. Again thank you for all the encouragement. Now out to help hubby build more fence to try and capture our wayward cow!
Happy Mother's Day all.
Deb W
If you can help a wayward cow - a stubborn Scottish one at that - then a wayward granddaughter should be no problem at all!
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