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Dad died in July 2021 and mom has been in AL now for nearly 5 months. We are selling their home next week. It’s almost empty now. I’ve been so busy as I’ve rushed to go through their stuff, pack up, keep, donate, or throw away, plus doing minor repairs and also keeping track of my mom’s condition as she went back into the hospital recently. I can’t explain how much grief I have about letting go of this home where he lived for so long. I’m feeling like I’m saying the final goodbye to him. On the other hand, I know it’s right to sell. Mom needs the money. And dad would be in complete agreement of selling the house to get the money for her care. I just feel a constant lump in my throat & chest and I keep feeling like crying though I don’t dare let myself weep much right now because too much to do. Everywhere I look I see all the telltale signs of his care for this home. He fixed everything and loved to make little improvements that made things easier for mom. I hated emptying his room, going through things he had used or appreciated having. When he died, I cried a lot. But now it feels really final and my loss feels overwhelming. Has anyone else gone through this? Any advice?

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Yes, but once it’s gone you’ll probably feel much better. I had the feeling that selling it was a job well done. I was glad it was over. I hope you will be too.
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This is all part of the grieving process, and yes quite common. Allow yourself to feel the loss of not only your dad, but the house where both he and your mom lived and enjoyed life.
Tears are healing, so let them flow and quit holding them back.
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Yes, I have. Packing up the house was devastating. It's also so understandable and normal. Let yourself grieve, keep some things for yourself and your kids/grands/nieces/nephews, etc. View this as a visit to a time when your parents were healthy and hale, and acknowledge how hard this is. It's normal. Can't fix normal. Take care of yourself.
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Was for me.

And in addition, add things, as well as reasonable things, cause that lump.

Look for someone who can share your feelings. That will help, and in my case, kindness has popped up in some comforting and unexpected laces.

I hope this will happen for you.
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Every time I turn around! The tv programs they watched, the music they listened to, the aromas of the food they cooked! Yes everyday! Know that its okay to cry, to be upset, to stop and take a breath. We are with you, we know, we care and we support you! Take each day one step at a time! I am sending you a cyber hug! ; )
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First. There is no time limit on grief.
Second. I am sure you really did not grieve as you were busy caring for mom, getting things sorted out along with all the detail that go with a death of a loved one. (were you actually able to sit down and have time for yourself let alone actually grieve the loss of your dad since 2021?)
Third. Every time you turn a corner in the house you are hit with memories. And to realize that there will not be another Christmas, Thanksgiving, Easter, Birthday party, Anniversary party there hurts.
Fifth. This is what mom and dad called home. This is a chapter that is closing.
Endings are hard no matter the reason.
What you are feeling is normal and if you were not sad, were not having a difficult time that is when you might want to worry.
Take the memories. Cherish them.
Know that another family will be happy in a home that was filled with love and care.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
You hit a nail on the head with all those holidays and birthday celebrations. That’s a biggie for me. It was the hub for so many of our get-togethers for so many decades. That dining room, that family room. That kitchen. I feel disoriented. It’s a big hole in my heart.
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Grief, as others have said, has no timetable. Many do not have happy memories left. I was trying to help myself with the death of my wonderful honey - my strength - my life. On the 1st anniversary of his stepping into heaven, the word celebrate came to my mind.

I still have times when his loss overwhelms me. That's okay. I then take the word celebrate and my memories go back to things in our lives to celebrate. At first I felt guilt - guilt I wasn't a 100% perfect caregiver. In my heart - I gave all I could just as he would have. My most precious memories are those we made by being creative the last six years of his life. He demonstrated his love to me in the most tender ways - although the disease would poke it's ugly head and we had to go through this together - I would never want to lose those cherished moments.

I have donated most of his things to those who needed them. I kept his old jacket he didn't want to part with, his shirts he wore repeatedly though he had new ones. My husband and I believed that if you can make someone's life easier - then do so. I was happy to donate to others the clothes I bought to make his life easier with dementia, the tools and activities that we did during the disease - all donated to help others.

When I have to fix something or arrange for someone else to do it - I get overwhelmed because he took care of it in the past. Now, I am celebrating life and all we did together and apart from each other. Memories are a special gift God gives to us. I am planning on writing down my memories which I understand is a great way to go through the grief. I'm so thankful that he is happy in heaven. Celebrate your blessings.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
God bless you forever for the love that shines through every word you say about your dear departed husband. It shows how tenderly you cherished him and he you. From the bottom of my heart, thank you for sharing your precious memories of your love that was faithful “until death do us part.” Here’s a hug.
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Oh, yes, I think very normal. I had great parents. Their home, and now my own homes, my brother's homes, were almost sentient beings to me. They were full of heart and soul and love and memories. I don't know how you could not do this work and both find yourself grieving and celebrating so much in terms of feelings. You must be exhausted with it all.

For me tears are often hard to come by, and I find them wonderful, cleansing, releasing. Allow yourself to feel this loss. It is the price we pay for great love.
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What you need to do is let yourself have a good cry. I assume its where you grew up so lots of good memories. Now, someone else will fill the house with Memories.

My parents had an old farmhouse we were raised in. I was ready to walk away when I was offered enough money to pay the leans on it. New owner wanted it for the 7 acres. He built around the old house and tore the old one down. House does not resemble the old one in any way.
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Absolutely. When my mother sold her house to move here with us, going through his den hit me hard. And he’d died a decade earlier.

Last time I drove past the house I lived in with my late husband I had to park because I started crying so hard I couldn’t drive. He’d been dead about twenty years.

Every now and then something reminds me of them and I’m thrown back into a moment of grief. Those events become fewer and now they’re more quickly replaced by a feeling of gratitude for the short times we had together.

You’re letting go of something full of memories. It’s emotionally overwhelming. I know you’re busy, but let the tears flow freely. It’s tough to hold all that back.

I made little photo albums of both houses.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
You made me cry, thinking about you sitting there 20 years later in front of your old house where you lived with your late husband. I still cry sometimes about my sister who died 42 years ago. I cried again recently when I found a box in my parents house full of her things including her baby book and the guest book people signed at her wake and funeral. She and I were very close in age and more than best friends when she died. I’m sure many around me can’t believe that I still miss her.
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Grief doesn't come in one big wave. It's a lifetime of little heartbreaks and stirred-up memories.

I didn't grieve for my dad almost at all in the beginning, because overnight I became responsible for my mother's care, arranging his funeral, her nursing home placement and all their affairs, and that was a full-time job. (Theirs was the classic case of the caregiver dying first.)

For me, a terrible dread settled on me as the first anniversary of his death approached. (Very odd, as I don't "do" death anniversaries.) I think I feared for my mother's broken heart mostly, but as it turned out she had no concept of the date by then nor did she even remember Dad anymore, so that great heavy weight in my chest was all my own. Somehow when that date passed, I was OK from then on. It never happened after my mom died, because it was very much her time, and I'd been grieving her loss for years as dementia stripped away everything but the shell.

We sold their house last July a year after my mother's death, and after the Realtor's people did all the "lipstick on the pig" work to make it appealing to buyers, it was unrecognizable as my parents' house or the home I grew up in. Oddly, it didn't affect me in the slightest, and I haven't given the house another thought.
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Everyone grieves in their own way. This is perfectly normal behavior. Wishing you peace during this difficult time in your life.
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Yes. Perfectly normal. Tears at times still come and bittersweet memories for my Dad who died over 25 years ago. My mom died last May. Oddly, in addition to grief over her, it set off some grief for my Dad again, too. My parents enjoyed doing things around the house, decorating, gardening and tending to it. They kept things in great shape. That was harder for my Mom when she relocated and bought a house to be closer to us.
As far as being too overwhelmed to grieve, I think many can relate. I know I can. I was an only and the executrix so it has been a year of travelling to inter her, probate, income taxes, going through the house to ready for estate sale, then donating and tossing the remainder. It is harder to find homes for some of the older things that were once considered heirlooms. It was painful at times to go through the stuff. Other times I was just overwhelmed by it all and just wanted to be rid of it. Anyway, now the house is prepped and put on the market. It is a shell of itself now she is gone and it is emptied. I feel I am doing good just to still be here and not have succumbed to illness or completely lost my mind so far, as lots of other unexpected and stressful things have happened over the last year and a half as well.
I feel I will be able to grieve more fully for my Mom when the house sells and all these tasks are finished. I can just focus on the memories I have of her and how best to honor her and carry the good memories into the future. Tears are healing and I hope to be able to cry more than I have so far.
I am sorry for your loss, your grief and the illness of your Mom. I don't know your beliefs, but calling on Jesus has helped me through this, plus a few visits with a therapist and a "can-do" attitude from my spouse.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Thank you I can relate to several things you said. The heirlooms just aren’t treasured anymore and that is painful to me. Nobody wants the beautiful old solid carved furniture, the silverware, crystal and china, linens, handmade laces, even things that have been handed down for a few generations and carefully preserved by one generation for the next. Also I feel like you that I am waiting to cry until this chore is done and it’s someone else’s house. In the meantime I try to consciously take a deep breath and release the tension that keeps coming back. My husband thinks when this is over it would be a good idea for me to take some time out for a deep “detox” to restore some health to my body and mind. I like his thought. Thank you for your words of sympathy. Yes I do pray and ask the Lord to guide me and I trust that he is. I am sorry for your grief and for the loss of your dear mother. Here’s a hug!
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Depends on your relationship with your parents. I did not get along with my parents so I celebrated. The happiest day of my life.
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Totally normal.. It's all part of letting go which can be very painful. The house is a trigger for the loss(es) of your parents as your mum is moving down that final road too.

Also the house is a loss in itself -and what it represents. I got rid of china, silver, crystal, old tablecloths and, hand embroidered pillow cases from generations back. These days no one wants them. It surely isn't easy. I am downsizing for myself now and letting go some of the few old family things I have kept and treasured. I don't want my kids to have a huge job when my time comes. My dd and grandkids have several old items they have chosen. My boys aren't interested.

(((((Hugs)))) to you. Expressing your grief is healthy and normal. You may find a grief group helpful if you continue to feel overwhelmed. When I lost my youngest son, a group helped me a lot.
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Sometimes I wish that I had something tangible from my parents home. Everything was destroyed in hurricane Katrina. Even the house itself was demolished. The house had nine feet of water and nothing was salvageable.

This was my childhood home. Sometimes, I drive past where I grew up and see a brand new house standing on the property. It affected me very deeply at first. I felt like my life there had been erased altogether. It’s kind of hard to explain.

Anyway, as I said in an earlier post, everyone grieves in their own way. Wishing you peace and healing in your journey of grieving for your parents.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
I’m so sorry you lost your home with everything- I can’t imagine how hard that is. Thank you for sharing your perspective and how I should be thankful to have these things still available so that I can go through this grief process. Blessings to you.
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I am in the process of doing the same thing. It was their home of 45+ years and my childhood home. I am so ready not to have to deal with all the bills, upkeep etc that comes with it and cleaning it out took 10 months because of borderline hoarding and I am exhausted but I know right before closing when I walk thru it for the last time I will be sad. It is sad to see it empty but at the same time a relief to get this huge task behind me. Mixed emotions for sure.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
I know I’m going to be relieved when the sale is done and I can focus on my mom’s needs.
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Of course you are grieving while preparing the house to sell....it was your home, it was their home and it is filled with memories of your lives together. Very understandable that this is emotional for you. If your mom needs the money to live, you have to do something. Have you thought about renting the house out and using that income to finance moms care? Then later on when emotions are not so high you can make an unhurried decision about the house. Just a suggestion. That would be one more thing to have to manage and it sounds like your plate is pretty full as it is.

I will tell you that as time moves on and you have other things to deal with and other decisions to make, the house will move down the list of importance. It is hard to see that now, but I promise you it will happen.

I'm sorry for everything you are going through. This time of life is hard....
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Thanks I appreciate the perspective that the intensity of this will diminish with time. We thought of renting it out, but decided selling is better for everyone involved.
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I completely relate to what you’ve written. My dad loved his home, did constant improvements, kept it clean and in perfect repair. I cleaned it out, mostly on my own, and prepared it for sale in the weeks after he died. My only advice is let those tears flow, they are healing. It’s a sad task, but one that I believe our parents would be proud of us for accomplishing. Side note, it also made me do a load of ongoing cleaning out at my own home as I’m more aware of paring it down for the next generation. I wish you healing and peace in this, knowing it’s so very hard
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Yes this has me wanting to empty my home NOW!
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Absolutely. ❤. Dad died in 2020, mom died in October. My sister and I have been so busy scrambling we haven't had a minute to grieve. Yesterday we listed the only home they lived in/the only home we ever lived in as kids in a neighborhood where all of us had lifelong friends. Turns out that will be the hardest piece of all of this. ❤
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
You’re not alone. ❤️
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It’s so hard. My mother REALLY wants my brother or myself to live in her house, which was also my grandparent’s house, after she is gone. She lives in it with my stepfather and they have a great life there. She is 81 and pretty healthy so hopefully she has many more years there. Problem is, I don’t really want to live in the house nor does my brother. Some people take comfort being surrounded by all those memories, and some people need to cut bait and start over. That would be me. We’ll see what happens when the time comes I guess.
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Grief is very complicated. You have the loss of your loved one and then you have all the secondary losses that come as you must part with their possessions and you no longer have their presence for important decisions, Grief also comes in waves and you can have what’s called a “grief ambush” where you think you are going along fine and then something triggers a whole new wave. I found a lot of help going through GriefShare. There are chapters all over the country. They can give you good tools for coping with grief and loss.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Thank you for sharing about grief ambushes. I think I had them when my sister died. Yes I’ve been getting the GriefShare emails all this past year. A dear friend lost his wife suddenly and he attends a group. I’m going to find one near me.
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My Dad went in AL 14 years after my Mom died. Selling the house was like selling HER house. She was all over that house. Grieved again after 14 years. I think it’s natural.
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Your present grief is certainly appropriate. I hope that you will seek grief support in your area; either 1:1 or groups. Hospitals, hospices, faith communities, the funeral services who served at the time of his death, some local health departments are all possible resources for you to access grief support groups or perhaps 1:1 support. Also, be sure you are seeing your primary care physician for overall health care; they may also be able to refer you for grief support.
Practice other good self care like staying hydrated, some form of physical exercise, prayer or meditation of your choice, healthy nutrition.......
Do seek grief support......
Peace
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Thanks. I am focused on staying hydrated and getting enough sleep right now, and I have plans to start a detox within a week of the house sale. From this forum I learned that caretakers can have health problems and even die from their caregiving. That was an eye-opener for me. After dad died, I hoped I’d get some mental and physical respite. It WAS a little easier (for a while) to be caring JUST for mom. But then, she went downhill. And I realize my health has suffered due to the intense stress of these last 9 months in particular. I just want to get back to feeling energetic and healthy again. Soon! It will happen.
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Yes! My parents moved in to their brand new home when they were expecting me in Dec of 1958. Dad died in Oct of 2019. Mom went into AL right after. The week before Dad died he walked from room to room telling the house goodbye and taling about hiw shirt life was, that it was just yesterday that he was buying new house with his beautiful pregnant wife. It was the only home I knew for 60 years. Selling it was necessary for moms care, but it seemed like a betrayal at the time. And it made it so final, could kind of think they weren't really gone when you could be there and see and smell their things. You will get through it. The pain is part of it. Blessings
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Thank you for sharing the story of your precious dad as he walked through, shared his memories, and said goodbye to his house. That brought tears to my eyes. What a wonderful memory for you.
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I haven’t been able to read responses, your post was already too emotional for me. First I don’t think it’s just your father your grieving, you are “loosing” the house and grieving that loss, you are likely grieving the loss of your mom as well and going through family possessions, the memories always bring up good memories that can also be sad when associated with a loved one that has passed or a time gone by. I would urge you to go ahead and feel it, take the time to have a good cry when it comes over you instead of holding it back. We grieve the loss of loved ones, especially parents, siblings, spouses, children for ever. Over time that space that feels like a black hole fills back up with love but there is always a scar just like there is always a piece of them with you but that takes time and each journey is different, there is nothing wrong with feeling overwhelming sadness just as there is nothing wrong with feeling a warm smile when memories flood in. I have little special momentous of important people in my life and still stop to both experience the happiness they bring as well as the sadness that my great grandmother, for instance, is no longer with us, her house has been sold and my son never got the chance to experience the special things I did as a child. She has been gone for 40 years. I also grieve the loss of my mother at certain moments when it really hits me and she is still alive, it’s an ever evolving process life and we are both blessed and cursed with the memories it offers.

Be kind to yourself, let yourself grieve and don’t do it all alone. Find and allow people, family, friends to help you go through the house and experience the memories with you.
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Such a timely post for me as I'm experiencing the same. I never lived at mom's house, but it was where my parents retired and the place that I visited and loved them for the past 20 years. It's been 3 years since my dad passed, but I've been missing him more this year, possibly partly because The house will be ready to sell soon. Allow yourself to grieve, but also remember the happiness and keep that in your heart. You are in my thoughts and prayers.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
Thank you so much for praying for me. I will pray for you too as you go through this same process.

A couple months before he died, as he was getting very weak, my dad told me some thoughts had about dying and how he thought he’d like to go. He said I am getting more and more tired and sleeping more, sometimes I can’t wake up for long and I think when I die it will be that I get so tired, I simply don’t wake up. So, when that happens don’t say a word, just wave goodbye to me, like this (and he waved at me with the palm of his hand), and smile to me. Then he said, as you wave to me I’ll just drift away like I’m in a row boat, and I’ll be smiling and waving to you. And we practiced waving to each other and smiling. Yes, he said, this is the way I’d like to go.

The house is empty now. It will belong to other people in a couple of days. I keep feeling myself waving goodbye to my dad just like we did that day, and I feel him waving back. And we both smile to each other. Me, with tears in my eyes. But my dad sweetly smiles to me, without any tears.
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Grief Counseling will help you accept your reality and, perhaps, help you deal with your future.

I plan to meet up with my parents and hope they will be waiting for me when I arrive. Please listen to the old song, "I'll be seeing you." (And, have yourself a good therapeutic cry.)
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InlandMeg: Yes, it absolutely can happen. I was living with and providing care for my mother in her home that also happened to be my childhood home. Mother passed away while I was there, I had to market and sell the house and also vacate it so that I could return to my state and my home. I was literally saying 'goodbye' to every tree and bush as my mother so loved her home - the home in which she lived 44 more years than my father, who died at age 50. My mother had 3/4 of a home mortgage loan to pay and she did it.
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InlandMeg Mar 2023
I have been saying goodbye to their OLD apple tree. We made so many pies and applesauce, etc. Today I dug up my parents favorite rose bush. In the process, I think I accidentally mutilated a section of it. But I couldn’t leave it. I hope it can tolerate my “care”. Dad gave it to her, decades ago. They would cut bloom after bloom for vases all around the house. The colors were beautiful, it smelled wonderful. Dad always commented how he thought he had the prettiest best smelling rose.
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Yes! You are feeling the loss of his presence as you do the final good bye - taking care of his things. It is OK to mourn the loss, but try to remember the good things so it tempers the grief.
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