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Long Winding, Descending Road

Wilted Daughter
Wilted Daughter Member Posts: 197
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Hello:

For 5 yrs. I am a primary caregiver living with 93 yr mother who has multiple health issues, vascular dementia (VaD) and on Hospice for several months. I believe the end of the road is near.

I have been circling various stages of grief as I witness what she is living through (unable to walk, stand, loss of hearing/understanding, delayed responses, slow motion action, inconsistent communication, etc.😔

Due to age, lack of recent interactions with family, so called friends, associates in addition to my daily grief the decision is for private funeral services, which her siblings will not understand or respect the decision. For 5 years it feels like I have been putting out fires daily on her behalf.

I'm exhausted, DO NOT like funerals or being in the presence of people with various ulterior motives. I feel that I have done enough and nothing more should be expected of me by anyone. I am the only child with one child and we just want peace for my mother and privacy, comfort for us. NO sympathy, food, visits, cards, or flowers.

**If you have similar shared experience(s) I would like to hear your stories.

Thank for reading, stay strong!!!

Comments

  • harshedbuzz
    harshedbuzz Member Posts: 5,731
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    @Wilted Daughter

    I am so sorry. I feel like this is totally up to you to decide.

    One of the bitterest pieces to dad's dementia journey was his funeral luncheon.

    My parents moved 200 miles away when dad, and by extension mom, were dropped by their social circle at the club when dad was likely at the very earliest and somewhat unfiltered stages of dementia. As dad progressed, even his brother shunned him. Mom once overheard his brother tell someone that he and dad were only half-siblings and that they didn't really grow up together when the truth was that dad who was older was his after-school care, tutor and even set him up in his fist business.

    Day of the funeral, so many of these people turned up to the funeral and luncheon after that my own DH and son had to grab a seat in the bar of the restaurant instead of being with me.

    I swore after that that mom's funeral will be limited to a graveside service for invited guests (her sister and my cousins if they can make it, my family and dearest friend, my nieces and their SOs. I will publish an obituary after and perhaps a mailed death notice to my dad's not-quite-brother.

    HB

  • Quilting brings calm
    Quilting brings calm Member Posts: 2,931
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    edited September 21

    I think the circumstances of every death is different and therefore every funeral ( or no funeral) is different.
    Our son died unexpectedly at 31. We put the obit in three papers. Two close to us, one where he had lived. We did a visitation immediately prior to the funeral, with a lunch afterwards. This was just a few days after his death. We gained comfort from the many attendees.

    When my step-dad died 22 months later, we had him cremated and deferred everything until mom passed. She died several months after my step-dad. We had a 15 minute graveside service two weeks later at a veteran’s cemetary, including military rites, on an extremely cold day. We published only the death notice with a mention of the funeral home. I notified almost no one but immediate family. I knew my siblings and two remaining aunts would not come for justifiable reasons. Maybe 30 people showed up with 20 total for lunch afterwards.
    The difference - they were in their 80s, had been in assisted living for 5 years with almost no visitors and they’d outlived most of their contemporaries. It was all I had the energy and patience for. I just wanted it all to be done. I would have done a completely private burial but our remaining adult son loved his grandparents.

  • Wilted Daughter
    Wilted Daughter Member Posts: 197
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    Thank you for sharing your experience. There are so many things that can go right or wrong with funerals. If this task is left to survivors and not pre-planned, paid by the deceased there is a lot of should haves, could haves instead of coming together in support of each other for the lost of a loved one. It seems all persons who attend a funeral do not truly or deeply "love" the deceased or family and come out of obligation, etc.

    I'll do what makes sense. 😌

  • Shenmama99
    Shenmama99 Member Posts: 26
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    Totally understand! My 94 yo mom has vascular dementia. She will be cremated and her ashes will be put in plot next to my dad’s. I HATE funerals and will not have one for her. Fortunately my sisters and I r on same page. No one outside of immediate family will even know when we will be burying her ashes. This whole dementia nightmare is draining and we all need to do what we can to survive it. It’s none of ur moms sisters business what u decide.

  • Anonymousjpl123
    Anonymousjpl123 Member Posts: 836
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    I relate, and agree with others above.

    Many, many extended families in the US are estranged yet there’s this weird idea that memorials should “bring everyone together.”

    When you’re the sole caretaker (as I am), it’s even more complicated because it sucks when people don’t show up, whatever their reasons.

    This is entirely your decision. You, your mom, and your child are the ones who lived this and will need closure to grieve. If other relatives want to plan something they are more than welcome to do so.

    This may sound bitter, but it really isn’t. My siblings and I have aligned closely around care for my mom but many family members haven't. I accept that, but I can’t make this experience about them. I may change my mind but that’s where things are now.

  • cdgbdr
    cdgbdr Member Posts: 257
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    You are absolutely able to handle the final arrangements as you see fit. My aunt with dementia died at 92. Her elderly husband felt strongly that the funeral should be for family only. He placed an obituary in the paper but no date or time of the service so that anyone who came was invited. She had outlived most of her contemporaries and it was what he wanted.

  • ARIL
    ARIL Member Posts: 207
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    It is an interesting question with no clear answer. It’s up to you.

    My PWD is almost 92 and has outlived most family and friends. Yet at one time he had a job that was public-facing, and I suspect many people I don’t know in his community (around my age) will want to pay respects. Plus, he has signed a notarized statement appointing me as his agent for the disposition of remains, and it specifies location and details of a funeral and burial. So that’s what I will do.

    I think a main question about funerals in general is: Who is this for, and what should it accomplish, and for whom? I agree with others that it is unrealistic to expect funerals to bring estranged families together; at the same time they can offer a concluding act that some people find comforting. I suspect that will be the case for me—not to review the past few years but to allow me to reflect on the longer scope of life.

    Your call, entirely.

  • Wilted Daughter
    Wilted Daughter Member Posts: 197
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    edited September 22

    Thank you soooo much for all your responses. There are experiences that gave me good ideas. For clarification I have no questions about the ‘right thing to do’ for all those concerned (mom, son, and me). Some of my mother’s wishes were illogical, imbalanced (one-sided) and I have repeatedly told her in the past. We believe she is in the transitional stage of dying, so it’s moot. I’m focused on objectives (honor my mother, disposition of the body, exhale and move on).

    Funerals have a broad subjective meaning, which complicates matters if there is an attempt to appease people with different views. I read and believe that funerals are an event to support the family, revere the deceased. It’s not a sought after gathering and unpleasant for most. My mother’s funeral is going to be small, private (invite only). It’s a small town so word will get out, but we can post something afterwards – it’s not a forethought.

    Again, thank you for taking the time to read and respond. Caregiving for a parent with dementia may be one of the hardest experiences in life for some…it is for me.

    May you all stay strong and solider ON!

    Quilting brings calm

    “…published only the death notice…”

    "It was all I had the energy and patience for. I just wanted it all to be done."

    Shenmama99

    “This whole dementia nightmare is draining and we all need to do what we can to survive it”

    Anonymousjpl123

    Many, many extended families in the US are estranged yet there’s this weird idea that memorials should “bring everyone together.”

    “…can’t make this experience about them.”

    cdgbdr

    “…placed an obituary in the paper but no date or time of the service so that anyone who came was invited.”

    ARIL

    “…main question about funerals in general is: Who is this for, and what should it accomplish, and for whom?”

    🤗🙏

  • SusanB-dil
    SusanB-dil Member Posts: 1,485
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    Also in agreement.

    When DH dad died, we had no funeral. Had a get-together maybe 2 weeks later. When his mom leaves us, it will be no funeral, and just a get-together (maybe a luncheon) a week or two later with only those closest. Especially since there are so few left who are genuinely concerned. Those who have abandoned can go pound sand.

    'this' is exhausting and we have enough on our plate without worrying about what others want us to do.

    You do what you are comfortable with.

Commonly Used Abbreviations


DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
Read more