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Memories

Post 1

Amy Pawloski, aka 'paper lady'--'Mufflewhump'?!? click here to find out... (ACE)

I'd started responding to paul's journal, but then realized I'd be hijacking itsmiley - blush So I'll move the hijacking-part here (because part *could* actually be useful over there...) and then go on a bit more in the next post (want to get this posted so I can stick the link in paul's journal--which is at F69196?thread=8300778 ) Actually, I'll paste a bit more than the hijacking-part, because that bit's a footnote to some of the maybe-useful bit...

***********

When my mom was unable to swallow*, and had a feeding tube in the convalescent home, she would still get a dry mouth. They had these pre-moistened spongy-swab things (lemon-flavored, iirc) that she could use, but those likely wouldn't help with actual dehydration...






*She had brain cancer. Inoperable (third-hand description is that it was like tar oozing into the convolutions). Fast--9 months from nothing visible on the MRI investigating why she was having seizures to nice and big. 3 months later, she wouldn't leave the feeding tube in. We lost her a couple weeks after her 52nd birthday. In 10 days, she would've been 65.


Memories

Post 2

Florida Sailor All is well with the world

smiley - cuddle


Memories

Post 3

Amy Pawloski, aka 'paper lady'--'Mufflewhump'?!? click here to find out... (ACE)

March is a hard month for me (well, not the last few years, unless I get reminded...) My dad's birthday was March 3--he would've been 65 this year. We lost him to MS of the brain (yeah, likely there's an actual real name for that, but that's what I was told, as well as it being really rare for MS lesions to be in the brain--of *course* Dad got something really rare smiley - laughsmiley - bravesmiley - cry) a couple of weeks before my wedding--Tom never got to really meet him. I mean, he met him in the sense that they were introduced, but Dad had pretty much no short-term memory at that point. He thought he'd been down here in Crescent City just a few days before. He'd been in the home for 2 years at that point, and had been down here for the last time about a year or so before that. He thought Tom (who at that point was working fast food, and hadn't worked any other industry) had a job related to making shoes, for some reason. Dad was 49.

smiley - eureka I just realized that the boyfriend I had before moving down here worked in a shoe factory. His name was Tod. We broke up a couple years before I met Tom, but the shoe thing makes sense now, given the memory thing.

Mom's birthday was March 27. Mom and Dad were born the same year. I don't actually remember them being married--Mom was remarried a month before my 3rd birthday. Lost my stepdad (search conversations for "Daddy Bob" for more details--I haven't the strength right now to go into more right now--don't want to explain crying to the girls right now) March 19, 2004--h2g2ers that knew me then might remember. Lost Grandma about a year later. Mom actually got past March--April 19 for her--but as it was Good Friday that year...smiley - shrug Don't know how I'd handle it if US Mother's Day was in March, like UK Mother's Day... Then again, it wouldn't be hanging over me for 2 months.

So, yeah, there's a very good reason I don't tend to say much in friends' journals when parent health issues/loss come up--in most cases, said friends are older than my parents managed to make it too, and those threads are *not* the place to point that out. And in the cases where my friends aren't older than my parents were, they're still older than I was when I'd lost my last parent, which is also inappropriate to mention in others' grieving threads. Because I refuse to make others' serious journals all about me-me-me (funny/surreal/going-to-drift-anyway ones are fair gamesmiley - winkeye), but *my* journal's different smiley - nahnah


Memories

Post 4

Milla, h2g2 Operations

Oh wow... I never realised you lost both your parents so early. smiley - hug
smiley - towel


Memories

Post 5

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

Medical science has kept my mother alive at least ten years longer than we ever expected. She needed a pace maker in her early 80s, and that was more than ten years ago. My father has only had one serious medical problem -- cancer of the bladder -- but he has managed fine without the organ in question. He looks and moves like someone twenty years younger than his actual age. I'm sure he's a very rare case, though.

I'd rather age like my father than my mother, but there's no telling which one I will take after. Medical science has kept *me* alive longer than I expected, too. smiley - erm I just take the pills for high blood pressure and high cholesterol, and keep my fingers crossed. My weight is a bit high, but as long as I'm not obese the doctor isn't going to complain.


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