Daughters that have lost their mothers.
I haven't been around in a long while, but I still do look over the boards on occasion. I thought I should come back and be with the ladies that have support me during my mom's 7 month battle with Ovarian Cancer.
I'm living with my dad and have been since my mom passed in December 2009. I have a pet bunny that keeps me company. I believe that she is my mom.. she acts like her, even has black hair like my mom did. She has a sweet tooth too (only one raisin or strawberry slice a day for her!) just like my mom.
I started working at a grocer as a Cashier. The cashier is the last person they see in the store so I have to leave a good impression of the store's image So far, so good. I speak to many different people.
I spoke to a wife whose spouse passed away and how the son's way of coping with it was to hide food and eat it.
It reminded me of myself. I have always been thin, and never worked out, but after my mom's passing, I gained 15 pounds (I have my mother's body, so when I gain weight, it goes directly to my hips, and thighs LOL) from eating out of distress. When I moved in with my dad, I could not stop eating. But I got tired of it one day. I realized that I want to eat better, and stay alive. I am fairly young, almost 24, but I want to live past my mother's age.
My dad goes to the gym a lot, so I signed up. I go 2-3 times a week (it has been more hectic since starting my new job) and I'm a vitamin popper. I take multivitamin, fish oil, vitamin b12, and fiber. I'm going to add calcium and vitamin d soon (due to the lack of sunlight here in Washington state haha!) to my regimen. I stay away from fast food, and eat smaller amounts of meat. I even eat some of my dad's vegeterian stuff
I do get my CA125 tested yearly. My doctor WANTS me to. I had an issue with a benign cyst and had to see my doctor, but he wasn't in that day. I was put with another (this was this year) and I asked to get my CA125 tested and she said "You are too young!" I said back to her "My regular wants me to get it done yearly." Uh huh.
I just signed up for my first Ovarian Cancer Walk in Seattle : ) I'm super excited. It is a 2 mile walk. I just bought a waist pouch bag to carry my cell phone and some water. I don't usually like name brands, but my mom bought me my first Harajuku Lovers bag - and I saw the waist pouch bag is HJ and on clearance (even better). It is the small things that remind me of her and make me honor her.
My boyfriend's parents usually get me something for my birthday in May, but I am going to tell them to use that money to sponsor me in the OVCA walk.
I went very off topic but, back to my job. There was another customer that had told me that.. it has been a long time since she lost her parents and it is very hard for her to deal with, even now. She asked me if I am okay. I said yes, but there are some days that I do cry. Something will trigger it - music, thoughts, photographs. Hawaiian music (my mom and I were both born in Hawaii) is a source of theraphy for me.
There was a lady that came through the line with her daughter. The mother had a black shirt with a pink ribbon on it and I instantly felt connected with her. We talked and laughed. I said "I will see you soon."
I feel like losing my mom has helped me connect with people I thought I never would. It makes me smile, and helps me think the world isn't so bad after all.
Comments
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Brittany,
thank you for sharing your thoughts. As a mom, with three kids, knowing I am not going to be here until I am old, I can't tell you how encouraging it is to see you processing this incredible pain and loss, and moving on with your life.
Please let me know how I can sponsor you in the Ovarian Cancer Walk. When is it?
It was so cool to meet you, even though it was brief!
Love you,
kathleen0 -
Welcome backkayandok said:Brittany,
thank you for sharing your thoughts. As a mom, with three kids, knowing I am not going to be here until I am old, I can't tell you how encouraging it is to see you processing this incredible pain and loss, and moving on with your life.
Please let me know how I can sponsor you in the Ovarian Cancer Walk. When is it?
It was so cool to meet you, even though it was brief!
Love you,
kathleen
Brittany: It's good to meet you in this club that wishes there would be no more new members. I love hearing about your pet bunny! I feel certain that your mother is proud of you.
My daughters are ages 24 & 28. No one has suggested that they have their CA-125 level checked yearly so now I am wondering if they should be doing that. Do you have insurance that pays for the test or do you pay the bill yourself? Did you or your mom have any genetic testing done? Thanks for sharing with us.0 -
you go girl
Hi Brittany! I'm so glad you checked in again, and that your life is going well. You'll probably never have as tough a year as last year. I trust your grandmother is doing well, too? Y'know, I'm old enough to be your mother but I learned a lot from your struggle. You go, girl, keep on shining.0 -
TestingLaundryQueen said:Welcome back
Brittany: It's good to meet you in this club that wishes there would be no more new members. I love hearing about your pet bunny! I feel certain that your mother is proud of you.
My daughters are ages 24 & 28. No one has suggested that they have their CA-125 level checked yearly so now I am wondering if they should be doing that. Do you have insurance that pays for the test or do you pay the bill yourself? Did you or your mom have any genetic testing done? Thanks for sharing with us.
Although my mom's cancer does not have a genetic component to it my doctor has suggested I get a transvaginal ultrasound done yearly just to be on the safe side.0 -
Brittany...so wonderful to hear from you!!!!!!
Dear Brittany,
So wonderful to hear from you...I was just thinking about you the other day...you sound like you are doing soooo well....I will never forget our on-line chats as your Mom was earning her wings....I am certain she is so proud of you right now and how you have handled this whole thing....I think that is clearly a sign of how great a Mom she was....I would really LOVE to sponsor you in your walk as well...can you let me know how I can get in touch with you to do that!!! Thank YOU SO MUCH for posting again!! Love, Fang Fish (Lisa13Q)0 -
Hello
Hi Brittany,
I think you must have started posting here before i became a board member. It sounds like you are doing pretty well after losing your mom to ovca. My mom is also terminal and sometimes it seems like i can feel my heart literally breaking into pieces. How do you get through it?
I am doing a walk for my mom too. Too bad we didn't live in the same area, we could have done it together. Let me know how it goes.
Sending hugs your way,
Kelly0 -
My mom did not have OC, butkellyh33 said:Hello
Hi Brittany,
I think you must have started posting here before i became a board member. It sounds like you are doing pretty well after losing your mom to ovca. My mom is also terminal and sometimes it seems like i can feel my heart literally breaking into pieces. How do you get through it?
I am doing a walk for my mom too. Too bad we didn't live in the same area, we could have done it together. Let me know how it goes.
Sending hugs your way,
Kelly
My mom did not have OC, but she was ill for a long time with Parkinson's Disease and Degenerative Disk Disease, which is very painful (compression fractures). She had worked very hard most of her life. She was a single mom and worked two jobs while I was growing up - a teacher and whatever she could pick up during Summer and Christmas break, plus weekends. She took in ironing to pay for my dancing lessons. I hardly ever saw her, for about 10 years. I had an older brother and he was my caregiver. Once her children were on their own, and a doting great aunt left her some money, she retired and began to enjoy her life. She took road trips with her garden club cronies, in search of rare orchids. She was a terrific grandmother - much more involved and relaxed than she was when I was a child.
My mother and I often had a difficult relationship. She had very high standards, and I never felt like I was adequate in her eyes. She was going thru menopause when I hit puberty - not a pretty sight. Our house was an estrogen war zone.
In her later years, when she needed a lot of care and just general help with things, I lived 200 miles away and my brother, who lived 10 miles from her, was useless. So I moved. Packed up my family, disrupted my kids' whole way of life (we lived in a rural area and they had horses and go-carts and all that that implies), and insisted my husband find a new job. All so I could look after my mother. I don't regret it to this day.
When my mother died, it was very sudden. I took her to the ER because her breathing was labored. They diagnosed pneumonia and admitted her, saying she would be fine. That evening, I got a call that she had been moved to ICU, following a fall and a suspected blood clot. She had evidently been throwing small clots for days. One had hit her lungs, thus the pneumonia. Again, though, they said she would be fine. They encouraged me to go home, around 3AM, and I did. I spoke to her again the following morning and told her I was on my way. When I got there, the doctor met me in the hall. When he put his arms around me, I knew.
I was 42 years old and felt like a motherless child. I WAS a motherless child. It took me 5 months to clean out her house. I could not stay there for more than an hour at a time. I would end up sitting in the floor, crying. I was absolutely useless and eventually just had someone come in and take everything away, after designating certain things I wanted to keep. My husband packed those up and some of them, I didn't unpack for years. I could not spend my mother's money for a long time. I did not consider it my money and I thought she would be angry at me.
Gradually, it got better. We buried her and I ordered a perfect headstone and made sure it was installed ASAP. Those kind of things were very important to her. I sold her house without ever going back inside. The older I get, the more I can see her in the mirror. But now, it doesn't hurt. In fact, it's rather comforting. It's the natural order of things.
My mother died in November, 1989, at age 78. She would have been 100 years old last month.
Carlene0 -
Wow Thank you for all ofHissy_Fitz said:My mom did not have OC, but
My mom did not have OC, but she was ill for a long time with Parkinson's Disease and Degenerative Disk Disease, which is very painful (compression fractures). She had worked very hard most of her life. She was a single mom and worked two jobs while I was growing up - a teacher and whatever she could pick up during Summer and Christmas break, plus weekends. She took in ironing to pay for my dancing lessons. I hardly ever saw her, for about 10 years. I had an older brother and he was my caregiver. Once her children were on their own, and a doting great aunt left her some money, she retired and began to enjoy her life. She took road trips with her garden club cronies, in search of rare orchids. She was a terrific grandmother - much more involved and relaxed than she was when I was a child.
My mother and I often had a difficult relationship. She had very high standards, and I never felt like I was adequate in her eyes. She was going thru menopause when I hit puberty - not a pretty sight. Our house was an estrogen war zone.
In her later years, when she needed a lot of care and just general help with things, I lived 200 miles away and my brother, who lived 10 miles from her, was useless. So I moved. Packed up my family, disrupted my kids' whole way of life (we lived in a rural area and they had horses and go-carts and all that that implies), and insisted my husband find a new job. All so I could look after my mother. I don't regret it to this day.
When my mother died, it was very sudden. I took her to the ER because her breathing was labored. They diagnosed pneumonia and admitted her, saying she would be fine. That evening, I got a call that she had been moved to ICU, following a fall and a suspected blood clot. She had evidently been throwing small clots for days. One had hit her lungs, thus the pneumonia. Again, though, they said she would be fine. They encouraged me to go home, around 3AM, and I did. I spoke to her again the following morning and told her I was on my way. When I got there, the doctor met me in the hall. When he put his arms around me, I knew.
I was 42 years old and felt like a motherless child. I WAS a motherless child. It took me 5 months to clean out her house. I could not stay there for more than an hour at a time. I would end up sitting in the floor, crying. I was absolutely useless and eventually just had someone come in and take everything away, after designating certain things I wanted to keep. My husband packed those up and some of them, I didn't unpack for years. I could not spend my mother's money for a long time. I did not consider it my money and I thought she would be angry at me.
Gradually, it got better. We buried her and I ordered a perfect headstone and made sure it was installed ASAP. Those kind of things were very important to her. I sold her house without ever going back inside. The older I get, the more I can see her in the mirror. But now, it doesn't hurt. In fact, it's rather comforting. It's the natural order of things.
My mother died in November, 1989, at age 78. She would have been 100 years old last month.
Carlene
Wow Thank you for all of the replies!
Kathleen - it was great meeting you! I hope that next time when you come, we can sit down and chat And have some coffee
I sent you the information on the walk on your facebook. It is Sunday, July 24th.
LaundryQueen - My bunny is a brat. She loves to push and boss me around. She is the only one that is allowed to.
I'm under my dad's insurance now and I do have to pay for the test (this whole health system is.. rather confusing). My mom was given the opportunity to get genetic testing but she was too ill to get it done The cancer hospital she went to was abnout a 45 minute drive. I will be getting insurance through my job in a few months, so I will be taken off my dads. I plan to get genetic testing done. I want to know. I told my mom that I would get a hysterectomy after my (future) child bearing years.
Kelly - I had a benign cyst in 2009 and I had to get an ultrasound done. A cyst was found, and I was on anti-inflammatory medication for a week. I don't get cramps very much due to birth control so I thought it was not a good thing when I was having pelvic pain.
Barbara - My grandma is doing well. She has my mother's ashes in her house until I am ready to go back to Hawii. My mom has always loved grandma's house.. it was always a sense of peace being there. My mother's urn has purple and pink roses on it - my mom loved pink, and I love purple.
I remember the time when it got closer to my mom's passing and my grandma and I went to a funeral home to do arrangements. My grandma had to talk to my mom... my mom was in denial about leaving.. but my grandma somehow got my mother's last wishes. I was put in a room with all different sorts of urns.. I was shaking. I did not cry and I don't understand that til this day.
In November of last year, Grandma thought of the idea of having a headstone placed underneath where my grandpa (mom's dad) is buried. I'm not sure if you can see this picture, but here is the link: http://i604.photobucket.com/albums/tt122/burichi2009/momsheadstone.jpg
(I guess photobucket won't let me post the complete link. To see the picture, get rid of all of the **** and add a period after 'momsheadstone.' and add jpg and I hope you will see it!)
Lisa - we will be in touch I REALLY like the fish picture btw
Kellyh33 - I was a wreck the entire months that my mom was terminal. She made me go and live life. I felt bad about doing it, but that is what she ordered me to do (I listened to my mom so she knew what was best). My grandma was there with me all of the way. She lost my grandpa and learned that staying in the hospital the entire day is not healthy. She guided me to make sure my hair also did not fall out.
There were days when I did not want to get out of bed, did not want to eat, or even want to go to work.
When is your walk?
Carlene - .. I believe.. no matter what, no matter age, no matter of what happened, it is always hard losing a parent
I will always remember the words from my mom "I'm sorry I made you grow up so fast." and I remember saying back "Mom, I needed to grow up.."0 -
Especially your mom, Brit.BrittanyC said:Wow Thank you for all of
Wow Thank you for all of the replies!
Kathleen - it was great meeting you! I hope that next time when you come, we can sit down and chat And have some coffee
I sent you the information on the walk on your facebook. It is Sunday, July 24th.
LaundryQueen - My bunny is a brat. She loves to push and boss me around. She is the only one that is allowed to.
I'm under my dad's insurance now and I do have to pay for the test (this whole health system is.. rather confusing). My mom was given the opportunity to get genetic testing but she was too ill to get it done The cancer hospital she went to was abnout a 45 minute drive. I will be getting insurance through my job in a few months, so I will be taken off my dads. I plan to get genetic testing done. I want to know. I told my mom that I would get a hysterectomy after my (future) child bearing years.
Kelly - I had a benign cyst in 2009 and I had to get an ultrasound done. A cyst was found, and I was on anti-inflammatory medication for a week. I don't get cramps very much due to birth control so I thought it was not a good thing when I was having pelvic pain.
Barbara - My grandma is doing well. She has my mother's ashes in her house until I am ready to go back to Hawii. My mom has always loved grandma's house.. it was always a sense of peace being there. My mother's urn has purple and pink roses on it - my mom loved pink, and I love purple.
I remember the time when it got closer to my mom's passing and my grandma and I went to a funeral home to do arrangements. My grandma had to talk to my mom... my mom was in denial about leaving.. but my grandma somehow got my mother's last wishes. I was put in a room with all different sorts of urns.. I was shaking. I did not cry and I don't understand that til this day.
In November of last year, Grandma thought of the idea of having a headstone placed underneath where my grandpa (mom's dad) is buried. I'm not sure if you can see this picture, but here is the link: http://i604.photobucket.com/albums/tt122/burichi2009/momsheadstone.jpg
(I guess photobucket won't let me post the complete link. To see the picture, get rid of all of the **** and add a period after 'momsheadstone.' and add jpg and I hope you will see it!)
Lisa - we will be in touch I REALLY like the fish picture btw
Kellyh33 - I was a wreck the entire months that my mom was terminal. She made me go and live life. I felt bad about doing it, but that is what she ordered me to do (I listened to my mom so she knew what was best). My grandma was there with me all of the way. She lost my grandpa and learned that staying in the hospital the entire day is not healthy. She guided me to make sure my hair also did not fall out.
There were days when I did not want to get out of bed, did not want to eat, or even want to go to work.
When is your walk?
Carlene - .. I believe.. no matter what, no matter age, no matter of what happened, it is always hard losing a parent
I will always remember the words from my mom "I'm sorry I made you grow up so fast." and I remember saying back "Mom, I needed to grow up.."
Especially your mom, Brit. You are NEVER ready to lose your mom. My husband was 66 when his mom died (she was almost 90) and it was as hard on him as if he had been 20.
I have to say, though, that it is the most unnatural thing in the world to bury your own child. It is every mother's worst nightmare. My daughter lost an infant to SIDS and it changed our lives forever.
My mom completely pre-planned and pre-paid for her funeral. It took a huge burden off of me. I am considering doing the same.
Carlene0 -
Thank youBrittanyC said:Wow Thank you for all of
Wow Thank you for all of the replies!
Kathleen - it was great meeting you! I hope that next time when you come, we can sit down and chat And have some coffee
I sent you the information on the walk on your facebook. It is Sunday, July 24th.
LaundryQueen - My bunny is a brat. She loves to push and boss me around. She is the only one that is allowed to.
I'm under my dad's insurance now and I do have to pay for the test (this whole health system is.. rather confusing). My mom was given the opportunity to get genetic testing but she was too ill to get it done The cancer hospital she went to was abnout a 45 minute drive. I will be getting insurance through my job in a few months, so I will be taken off my dads. I plan to get genetic testing done. I want to know. I told my mom that I would get a hysterectomy after my (future) child bearing years.
Kelly - I had a benign cyst in 2009 and I had to get an ultrasound done. A cyst was found, and I was on anti-inflammatory medication for a week. I don't get cramps very much due to birth control so I thought it was not a good thing when I was having pelvic pain.
Barbara - My grandma is doing well. She has my mother's ashes in her house until I am ready to go back to Hawii. My mom has always loved grandma's house.. it was always a sense of peace being there. My mother's urn has purple and pink roses on it - my mom loved pink, and I love purple.
I remember the time when it got closer to my mom's passing and my grandma and I went to a funeral home to do arrangements. My grandma had to talk to my mom... my mom was in denial about leaving.. but my grandma somehow got my mother's last wishes. I was put in a room with all different sorts of urns.. I was shaking. I did not cry and I don't understand that til this day.
In November of last year, Grandma thought of the idea of having a headstone placed underneath where my grandpa (mom's dad) is buried. I'm not sure if you can see this picture, but here is the link: http://i604.photobucket.com/albums/tt122/burichi2009/momsheadstone.jpg
(I guess photobucket won't let me post the complete link. To see the picture, get rid of all of the **** and add a period after 'momsheadstone.' and add jpg and I hope you will see it!)
Lisa - we will be in touch I REALLY like the fish picture btw
Kellyh33 - I was a wreck the entire months that my mom was terminal. She made me go and live life. I felt bad about doing it, but that is what she ordered me to do (I listened to my mom so she knew what was best). My grandma was there with me all of the way. She lost my grandpa and learned that staying in the hospital the entire day is not healthy. She guided me to make sure my hair also did not fall out.
There were days when I did not want to get out of bed, did not want to eat, or even want to go to work.
When is your walk?
Carlene - .. I believe.. no matter what, no matter age, no matter of what happened, it is always hard losing a parent
I will always remember the words from my mom "I'm sorry I made you grow up so fast." and I remember saying back "Mom, I needed to grow up.."
Thanks for taking the time to answer my question. I just spent the evening with my mom, we talked a little but mostly i just rubbed her head until she fell asleep. I hate seeing her like this, it is so very sad. Mom is desperate to have someone with her at all times, she is so fearful of dying alone. Dad is always there but this is so hard on him too especially since he is blind. I am sure he is afraid of what will become of him when something happens to my mom, she has always been his caregiver.
The winners walk of hope is September 11th. I am very excited and greatful to be able to give something back.
It may sound kind of odd, silly even but the thought of cremation completes send me over the edge but it is what my mom wants so therefore that is what we will do. I don't know how i will handle it when the time comes......0 -
Hissy_Fitz said:
My mom did not have OC, but
My mom did not have OC, but she was ill for a long time with Parkinson's Disease and Degenerative Disk Disease, which is very painful (compression fractures). She had worked very hard most of her life. She was a single mom and worked two jobs while I was growing up - a teacher and whatever she could pick up during Summer and Christmas break, plus weekends. She took in ironing to pay for my dancing lessons. I hardly ever saw her, for about 10 years. I had an older brother and he was my caregiver. Once her children were on their own, and a doting great aunt left her some money, she retired and began to enjoy her life. She took road trips with her garden club cronies, in search of rare orchids. She was a terrific grandmother - much more involved and relaxed than she was when I was a child.
My mother and I often had a difficult relationship. She had very high standards, and I never felt like I was adequate in her eyes. She was going thru menopause when I hit puberty - not a pretty sight. Our house was an estrogen war zone.
In her later years, when she needed a lot of care and just general help with things, I lived 200 miles away and my brother, who lived 10 miles from her, was useless. So I moved. Packed up my family, disrupted my kids' whole way of life (we lived in a rural area and they had horses and go-carts and all that that implies), and insisted my husband find a new job. All so I could look after my mother. I don't regret it to this day.
When my mother died, it was very sudden. I took her to the ER because her breathing was labored. They diagnosed pneumonia and admitted her, saying she would be fine. That evening, I got a call that she had been moved to ICU, following a fall and a suspected blood clot. She had evidently been throwing small clots for days. One had hit her lungs, thus the pneumonia. Again, though, they said she would be fine. They encouraged me to go home, around 3AM, and I did. I spoke to her again the following morning and told her I was on my way. When I got there, the doctor met me in the hall. When he put his arms around me, I knew.
I was 42 years old and felt like a motherless child. I WAS a motherless child. It took me 5 months to clean out her house. I could not stay there for more than an hour at a time. I would end up sitting in the floor, crying. I was absolutely useless and eventually just had someone come in and take everything away, after designating certain things I wanted to keep. My husband packed those up and some of them, I didn't unpack for years. I could not spend my mother's money for a long time. I did not consider it my money and I thought she would be angry at me.
Gradually, it got better. We buried her and I ordered a perfect headstone and made sure it was installed ASAP. Those kind of things were very important to her. I sold her house without ever going back inside. The older I get, the more I can see her in the mirror. But now, it doesn't hurt. In fact, it's rather comforting. It's the natural order of things.
My mother died in November, 1989, at age 78. She would have been 100 years old last month.
Carlene
Carlene, your post makes me cry. I always think of you as being a super strong person. It is not going to be easy i know this but reading that you and Brittany have survived it gives me a little bit of comfort.
Does it still make you angry or are you past it? I get angry when i think of losing my mom before she reaches 70. It doesn't seem fair, her mom lived to be 88.0 -
Kelly... I don't everkellyh33 said:
Carlene, your post makes me cry. I always think of you as being a super strong person. It is not going to be easy i know this but reading that you and Brittany have survived it gives me a little bit of comfort.
Does it still make you angry or are you past it? I get angry when i think of losing my mom before she reaches 70. It doesn't seem fair, her mom lived to be 88.
Kelly... I don't ever remember being angry about it, just very, very sad. My mom actually died early, as compared to other women in our family. My grandmother and Mom's sister were both 92. My great-grandmother was 88. Never a case of cancer until my generation, when a cousin died of lung cancer.
Carlene0 -
Another double postkellyh33 said:
Carlene, your post makes me cry. I always think of you as being a super strong person. It is not going to be easy i know this but reading that you and Brittany have survived it gives me a little bit of comfort.
Does it still make you angry or are you past it? I get angry when i think of losing my mom before she reaches 70. It doesn't seem fair, her mom lived to be 88.
Is there an echo in here?0 -
I get sad thinking aboutkellyh33 said:
Carlene, your post makes me cry. I always think of you as being a super strong person. It is not going to be easy i know this but reading that you and Brittany have survived it gives me a little bit of comfort.
Does it still make you angry or are you past it? I get angry when i think of losing my mom before she reaches 70. It doesn't seem fair, her mom lived to be 88.
I get sad thinking about Mother's Day coming.
I'm sad that I'm 23 and she won't be there when I am married or when I have her first grandchild. I'm sad she won't be there to baby sit for me.
When I was walking to my second interview at the job I'm at now, it was a rare sunny day. I felt my mother's presence for a second and it made me smile.
My mom hid a lot of stuff from me, because she did not want to hurt me. She did not want me to worry. But, I did not want anything hid from me. My family is full of secrets and I am tired of it. I found out as much as I could. I did not know my mother had cancer in her bones - her spine, clavical, zyphoid process, and pelvic bone.
I had no idea what my mother's last wishes were. My grandma and I were there when my mom went. It was also very hard on my grandma (who is actually my mom's stepmom, but was more of a mom to my mom, and to a grandma to me) as she knew my mom since my mom was in her 20's. Mom was very close to grandma.
Kelly, no matter what, please stay on the forums It is a great comfort to have you here.0 -
Dear Brittany
I'm so glad to be able to read an update for you. Your Mom would love knowing that you are reaching out and having those connections with people. I lost my Mom many years ago and will forever miss her. As time passes we begin to remember all the wonderful things that we loved about our Moms, and less about the why and how of their passing. These first few Mother's Day's /birthdays etc. can be tough, but it's all part of the process.
I think going to the gym is a wonderful outlet. My family is big on all that stuff. The gym is a healthy way to work off stress. We have a OVCA walk coming up in my town on July 4th. My whole is planning to walk/run. I'm thinking we need to have some T-shirts printed up so everyone will know we are a TEAM... what do you think?
(((HUGS))) Maria0 -
HiMwee said:Dear Brittany
I'm so glad to be able to read an update for you. Your Mom would love knowing that you are reaching out and having those connections with people. I lost my Mom many years ago and will forever miss her. As time passes we begin to remember all the wonderful things that we loved about our Moms, and less about the why and how of their passing. These first few Mother's Day's /birthdays etc. can be tough, but it's all part of the process.
I think going to the gym is a wonderful outlet. My family is big on all that stuff. The gym is a healthy way to work off stress. We have a OVCA walk coming up in my town on July 4th. My whole is planning to walk/run. I'm thinking we need to have some T-shirts printed up so everyone will know we are a TEAM... what do you think?
(((HUGS))) Maria
I feel like it is my
Hi
I feel like it is my duty to be around people that share my pain and heartache. I feel attached to everyone, even if I have been gone for a while.
I see a lot of 'Mother's Day' ads at the grocer that I work at. It makes me a little sad. Last year was my first Mother's day without my mom. My grandma made sure that I was doing okay. I spent it with my bunny. I am her mommy, LOL
Wow, an OVCA walk on Fourth of July? That is cool : )
A team shirt? I really want one! I have a shirt from the OVCA National Alliance. It says Teal is Power! I plan to wear it to the walk.0
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