I held my mother’s icy cold hand and I whispered, “You can go now mom.”

“Why don’t you feel good about this? Wasn’t it the kindest thing to do?” If my intention was to have my mother pass in order to end her suffering, that would have been kind; however, that was not my intention. In truth, I thought it was wrong to keep her hooked up to a respirator and I knew she’d try to hang on for as long as she could; mom was fiercely stubborn. We had a complicated relationship and I was tired of the drama; I was done. Before you start hating me, I’d like you to consider a few facts. For one, my mother had been in and out of hospital for several years and near death numerous times. She was resuscitated and even though she told my stepfather that she did not want to be, he went ahead and ordered it anyway. She had not completed the paperwork in hospital, no surprise to me or my siblings. When I say that my relationship with my mother was complicated, I believe an explanation is warranted. In many ways, throughout my youth and twenties, I was the parent. My mother was a heavy smoker (even during her pregnancies), a gambler, cheated on my father, a thief (insurance fraud and groceries to name two), and she did psychological damage to all four of her daughters. Three out of four of my sisters had eating disorders due to my mother’s unhealthy weight obsession. I was constantly reminding her about the hazards of smoking, begging her to cut back; also to slow down the gambling, and to see a therapist in order to deal with her self-inflicted pain. So when I said, You can go now mom, it was after many years of shame and disappointment, as well as a strong belief that modern medicine was prolonging the inevitable. Some people will say that I judged her harshly; others will say that it does not matter how awful she was, I should not speak ill of her. You can be certain that my living siblings would attest to my account of our upbringing and the chaos she rained upon us as adults.
How I handle my grief and remorse is my choice.When she was alive she would actually say, “I know you’re going to write a book about me when I die.” That was her way of telling me to wait. The irony is that I loved her. When family members would scorn her, I would jump to her defense. But deep down I believed that she was selfish, disingenuous, and should probably not have given birth to children. True, she had an abusive father and she got pregnant when she was 16 years old, but that does not excuse the poor mothering; she knew better. I’m certain she knew better.
Future Travel
Scotland very soon — Glasgow, Oban and several islands off the coast; a brief September trip to Basel Switzerland, followed by Dubai, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, and Hong Kong in late September and October; South Africa in early 2024.
Current State of Mind
Mellow, very mellow. It was sweltering hot and then we had the most glorious, cool, breezy day on Friday. It felt good to be alive.

As my 93-year-old Mother’s primary caregiver, I am always interested in other people’s journeys with their parents. When she dies I will wonder if I did enough, and how I will feel, etc. Thanks for sharing
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Thank you for writing. What you’re going through can’t be easy, but I am almost certain you are doing more than enough.
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While I had a very different relationship with my mother, she was kind, wise loving and one of the most beautiful people I have ever met to this day… my mother has been gone over half my life but she is with me everyday. On her death bed only me and my older sister were with her that morning, she had stage 4 ovarian cancer… she went into cardiac arrest as she was getting bed that morning, and although my sister was older they asked me should they resuscitate or let her go .. . I said let her go … the most difficult decision I have ever made, my mother was a big woman and the treatment ( radiation and chemotherapy) were going to be grueling and painful so I like you let her go! I think it was the most loving thing I could do for her and I believe it was the most loving thing you ever did for your mother…sending you healing thoughts my friend today and everyday 🙏🏾💕❤️
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Thank you Sherrill and sorry for your loss. I think we both did the right and best thing. I miss having you in my life. You’re a wonderful soul.
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