Dear Ripcantrell,
My heart really goes out to you. My Mum died in November 2020. She’d had a lot of health issues but was not expected to die suddenly when she did.
I want to really reassure you that feelings of guilt, regret etc are extremely common for many people when their loved one dies. A few months after Mum died I went to a grief support group and so many people reported those emotions.
I had been beating myself up thinking I wasn’t fully present with my Mum in the last year of her life as I was trying to finish a uni degree. I was taking her to medical appointments and procedures, dressing wounds for her, taking her for some day trips and on a short road trip, but all that time I felt I was distracted and, looking back, thought I should have picked up more on things that might have been a clue about the undiagnosed heart condition she ended up dying from. I also felt she wasn’t being taken seriously enough by medical practitioners with regard to symptoms she was having and I wished I’d pushed harder for them to do more.
But the reality is we are all only doing the best we know how to do at the time. As your Mum had been discharged and seemed to be improving it’s understandable you thought it was ok to return to Australia. The fact you care so much and have the feelings you do show you are a sensitive, good human being who really loved your Mum.
A few people have said to me that my Mum would not want me to be suffering and beating myself up now. I’m sure your Mum would be the same. You are also in the very emotionally raw state of it only happening a couple of days ago. While it’s a painful process it does ease with time, even if that process is gradual.
Gradually the good memories with Mum have been easier to reach for me over time and start to balance out the difficult emotions. I often draw on the qualities in her as a person that have given me real positives in life. She was so interested in the world around her and I know that’s why I take an interest in the world. Although at times she was consumed by mental illness stemming from childhood trauma, at her core she was a deeply kind and wise soul. I’ve been sustained by the gratitude I feel for what she gave me despite her own troubles in life and this has really helped with the grief.
We are all doing the best we know how to do so please don’t be hard on yourself and see if you can give yourself the love you so clearly feel for her. Take care and it will get easier in time.