I must admit that in the day husband died, I'd expected to get to hospital, find him in bed with a couple of tubes and monitors. Unconscious, probably but still alive...
Unfortunately, I could tell as I looked into his eyes, that the pupils were fixed and dilated. I knew something wasn't quite right... Then, I noticed that his left eye was crushed... Whoa!
I'd picked up his belongings upon entering the A&E room. Checking his glasses, they weren't broken. Strange! As daughter had mentioned he'd fallen face down.
All of this happened quickly, rigor mortis had already set in. He was gone and not coming back. I just wanted to leave, but they insisted we'd stay with him to say goodbye...
We didn't know what to say or do. Shock was settling in. I wanted an explanation and medication. None came forward... After 5 minutes, we took our leave... All before us was the shell of the man who had been my husband.
His soul had departed his body and there was nothing left to say or do. We both gave a kiss on his forehead, tried one more time to get answers and was told to wait for the coroner's phone call.
Needless to say, neither of us slept for 3-4 days. We were on automation!
When you know that a loved one is ill in advance, you can deal with it a certain way. However, when it's out of the blue and no one's talking, you wonder.
Simply, it was reliving my Father's death, all over again. I'd seen Papa dying in front of me in my teenage years. Now, our daughter had seen her Father dying in front of her. We could relate... and that's what we talked about in those 3-4 days following our lost.
One grandmother lost her husband, my unknown grandfather, round age 63-65. She lived alone until two weeks before her 100th birthday, and died of natural causes. Going up my family's genealogy tree, all of us women, outlive our spouses by nearly 30 years.
I feel that I will follow the family's tradition ...
Having very few people I consider close friends, I don't get news of whom has passed away or is in hospital at all. Occasionally, I check the state of the cemetery where I have relatives buried there. It floods frequently.
So sometimes, I perused the online obituaries pages and I'm surprised to find uncles, aunts and even cousins having departed. It's sad...
Recently, I've found an old friend from school had passed away. We'd lost touch as she moved to another city after graduation and got married. I was surprised to read in her obit that she'd died around 30 years of age on the operating table.
This during a tubal ligation as she'd given birth to four children in quick succession and was suffering from major iron deficiency anaemia. Her husband was very regretful at not having taken the course of a vasectomy.
Besides leaving her devastated husband, she also left behind a four, three, two and one years old children. I cried so much, I thought I'd run out of all the liquids in my entire body.
It was overall a good released, as I'd been unable then to let go of the pain bottled up inside of me since husband's passing.
All I know from my previous 7 experiences of dearly departed, you never forget them, you keep them in your heart but... you go forward looking to the future knowing you've had good memories and from now on more good memories to look forward too in the new chapters coming up ahead...