Families logo

The End of a Family

Looking Back on the Death of My Mother 15 Years Ago

By Richard DouglasPublished 7 years ago 8 min read
Like

I wrote this in an old diary on 11th March 2003 at 6:35am, some seven months after my mum died. It was the first time I could put pen to paper and recount what happened.

For reference, Alison is an old friend of mine, Robert and Matthew are my younger brothers, Chris is my partner, Kevin is a friend of Robert's, John was my mum's brother and Elaine his wife. Janet and Celia were friends of my mum's, Philip is my dad's brother and Denise was his wife.

I lived in London at the time and my parents lived in Lancashire.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

There are a number of reasons why I stopped writing there but primarily because I was avoiding writing about the events of last summer.

On 4th July 2002 at about 8 pm my mum died.

She had been suffering from cancer a second time and despite much treatment — chemotherapy mostly — she didn't make it.

I got a call from my dad whilst I was at Kings Cross station waiting for a train to Leeds to visit Alison. He told me that somehow, during the night, she had turned in bed and her hip had crumbled and broke.

At this point, nobody knew the seriousness of this and we assumed that she would go to the hospital and be fixed up. I asked dad to keep me up to date and went to Leeds. It didn't feel right.

On the Sunday as I was waiting for a cab to take me to Leeds station, I got a call from Dad again telling me that she was now on morphine. This is when I knew it was going to happen soon. I asked Dad what he thought I should do (my train to London was within the hour) and he suggested that I should go to Preston.

I took the train to Preston and Dad picked me up and took me to Churchtown (they were living at Gran and Grandpa's old house in Churchtown whilst renovating Clifton House.)

When I got there I went in to see mum. She was very drowsy from the morphine but still able to talk. I asked her if she was comfortable and she said no. I helped her to sort out her pillows. Every time she moved she was in agony.

She had a catheter as she was bedridden. Nurses came a couple of times a day to clean her and move her to prevent bed sores. Every time she moved she screamed in pain — you couldn't get away from the noise. Her bedroom smelled horrible, like pee and disinfectant, like a geriatric ward at a hospital — the smell of dying.

I went out with Robert who was there. I bought her some magazines — home magazines... Still planning the house! I don't think she could read them though. I also bought some food and wine and made meals for us all. Mum's last meal was one that I made.

I spoke to Matthew and told him that he should come over. I think Robert picked him up. I don't think he realised how serious it was until he got there. I kept taking him out of Mum's room because he was getting so upset and I wasn't sure if she knew or not but felt she might so I thought it best.

At some point during the five days, we were told that she wouldn't recover. Also, her morphine was increased gradually. It was in a pump that hissed every now and then as more was injected.

I was on the phone with Chris a lot. I wanted him there but also felt that it was right that it was just family. I was annoyed when Kevin turned up, not least about his reaction when he saw Mum. It was a look of shock and fear and revulsion which whilst being understandable was something I didn't need to see.

John came over a couple of times. He was a wreck.

I called Janet and Celia because I thought they should know. Janet wept like a child as soon as I told her and had to hang up. Celia kept talking normally for a few minutes before suddenly breaking down. I also had to call Matthew's boss so that they would know why he wasn't at work.

It is the most surreal and painful thing to have to tell people that your mum is going to die in the next few days — especially when the people you are telling are your mum's best friends.

On Thursday, Chris drove up. He arrived at about 7 pm and I needed to get out so I took him on a tour of Churchtown. We walked down the road. I showed him the two houses that Philip and Denise had lived in then we went to the Punch Bowl for a drink.

I was about half way through my pint when Kevin called from the house. He said 'I think you'd better come back.'

When we got to the house, she had died. She lay there with her head back and her mouth open not breathing anymore. She looked yellow and old.

Dad, Robert and Matthew were sat around the bed and the curtains were closed. I held her head in my hands and kissed her. Then I broke down.

Dad said 'a prayer to speed her to heaven.'

About 5 or 10 minutes later, the nurses arrived at the door to see to Mum again. I told them that she had gone and asked them for a couple of minutes before they went in to clean her.

The nurses did their stuff and then Chris and I went in to sit with her before the undertakers arrived. The most startling thing was the change in sound in the room.

After the gurgling and rattling in her chest and throat as she developed pneumonia, the room seemed extremely calm now. I held her hand and kissed her again. The nurses had sprayed her perfume around the room.

Dad was in the living room phoning family and friends to tell everyone. Eventually, the undertakers came and took her away. We all packed up and went to John and Elaine's.

I have never been back to that house.

Mum's funeral was on 11th July. It was a very sunny, warm day.

She left from Clifton House, went to St. Chads, and was buried at the cemetery just outside town. Everyone went back to John and Elaine's afterwards.

The strange thing is that only now, months later, I am noticing how it affected me and continues to.

I went back to work immediately but don't know how I managed to do anything — it all seems a bit dream like now.

We've left London now. We lived at my dad's (that's weird too — not saying 'my parents') in Poulton for a couple of months and now live in Chester.

I still have weird dreams about Mum and get upset every day.

If you imagine your body is made up of your emotions, it now, still, feels like a huge chunk of my chest has just disappeared. Most of the time I feel empty and as if I am just floating about aimlessly. I don't feel like I have much influence on my own life — I just react to situations. I have little enthusiasm for anything and no ambition. I don't feel that I can talk to anybody about it and I don't think most people are interested.

The whole affair (for want of a better phrase) has made me clarify my thoughts on what happens after death. During Mum's funeral the words about God and Jesus did nothing to comfort me. It's hideous but I can only think of her in a box under ground. It kills me to go to her grave. Mum was only 55.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

It's 15 years since my mum died. I still don't go to her grave.

They say time is a healer, well I'd say that's true. In my case, it was a long, slow journey with ups and downs along the way. At first, it didn't get easier, I just got more used to it, then little by little, without even noticing, it did get easier.

Without realising when it happened, I didn't cry every day, or even every week. Eventually, I didn't think about her every day and then after that, I stopped feeling guilty for forgetting to think about her every day.

The memories of those days faded and in their place fond memories - possibly rose tinted but I'll allow myself that.

I still remember her in October on her birthday, then at Christmas and Mother's Day, and I can't help but count the years since she died.

My family has changed hugely since I wrote the diary entry, we have lost a lot more people and we've had a lot of new additions along the way too.

That's life though, isn't it? We're not around for a long time and some draw the shorter straw. Who knows what's in store for me, or anyone for that matter, but one thing I've learned is the importance of living your life.

You don't need to be famous or wealthy, you needn't jump out of an aeroplane or climb a mountain (though those are perfectly good things to do) but make it count. Have good friends, enjoy your life, if you want to try something, try it, if you want to go somewhere, save your pennies and go there, if you want to be someone then be it.

Don't be scared or intimidated, it really doesn't matter what anyone else thinks, you've only got one life and you should live it well.

grief
Like

About the Creator

Richard Douglas

British writer penning articles, blogs, short stories, plays and novels. Well just the one novel right now...

Seeking representation so, if you're an agent, get in touch. If you're not, then I hope you enjoy what I write anyway.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2024 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.