We knew the end was coming because her body started shutting down. It wasn't clear how long she would have to suffer, there is no road map when the end is near. She was in pain most of the time and the slightest touch to her right hand would cause her to yell in pain.
The week before she died, I took time off from school to sit with her. There wasn't much communication, but I know she knew I was there. I would rub her good arm and hold her hand. I read scripture and played CDs of hymns. I did not want her to be alone when she died. Based on her physical condition, the lack of water and food and the amount of morphine she was being given, it was clear she did not have long. Yet day after day she languished.
Finally, Brenda a wonderful, loving nurse took me aside. She said, "Sharon, your mom is going to die on her terms not yours. She was a strong willed woman and my guess is she wants to be alone when she finally crosses into heaven. When she was well, she was a capable, in-charge woman. That is how she will die- in-charge. You need to go home, early tonight, get some sleep and go back to work."So that night, instead of leaving at midnight, I kissed my mom goodbye at 6pm and went home to sleep. I never did go back to work, because she died at 3:30 that morning. The nurses assured us that she was peaceful. They kept the music playing and the morphine flowing.
During those days of sitting with her, the nurses that had taken care of her for years came in one by one to say goodbye. They didn't really say goodbye, they just told her they loved her and squeezed her arm or rubbed her head. These were the same women who had showed me the bruises or scratches she had inflicted on them, yet they still loved her in a way that I could not fathom. God bless them!!
In the end, she made the final decision. She decided she wanted to die alone and she did. The day she died was a scramble of emotions and activity. Funeral preparations, getting her stuff from her room at Father Baker's and preparing pictures. Ahhh the pictures. My mom had been a scrapbooker before the word was popular.
The weekend after mom's funeral was the "October Surprise" storm, which shut down Buffalo for almost a week. That Thursday as I was driving home over round hail pellets that seemed to come out of nowhere, I wondered if mom was starting to cause mischief in heaven. By Saturday when we were home and snow bound in mid-October, I was sure of it!!!


Sharon-
ReplyDeleteThank you for this beautiful and transparent post. I am sorry that I wasn't there and able to share all of this with you, Grandpa and Beth.
I know the painful moments we pass through from year to year as we remember dates and places surrounding the death of those we love. But we rejoice in that Grandma and Josh...they are praising God together in Heaven, worshipping God and beholding His majesty. And we know, that one day, we too will have the best reunion ever....no pictures needing to be taken, because we will be together for eternity.
I love you-Stacy