Been dealing with a lot of people dying in my life lately.
My Dad passed 2/23/26. Peaceful and quiet and NO MORE PAIN!!!
My Aunt (his sister) passed the week before. She can breathe now.
My best gardening buddy down the road from me died in short order of leukemia end of last year.
I have a great friend who I am now listening to over the phone die more each time I talk to him. He has glioblastoma. A 100% fatal brain cancer.
I like to think of myself as a really tough person, but this is really pressing on my heart. I find myself breaking down just walking in the house or hoeing the garden or taking a shower. It hits very randomly and I try to deal with it as best I can.
My question is to you who have went through a lot of death of close friends and relatives in a short amount of time. How did you deal with it? What would you have done different? How long was it before you were able to catch yourself in those break down moments? What advice do you have for a person going through this now? It's not unbearable but it is like carrying a 50 lb beaver through a sticky thick swamp in a pack basket with waders on. It can be done but its not pleasant.
Thank you in advance. Your time and response are very valuable to me.
well we can start with cancer sucks , lost too many to it
don't try not to feel it , this is where people fall into a downward spiral trying to kill their pain with substance. not saying you would but many have. you are here so keep living every day. you know how numbered they might be , you never know. so find your joys in friends , family , trapping , fishing , whatever it is.
best advice is DO feel it , it is going to hit you in the quiet times the most and hey if you cry in the shower it just goes down the drain same as the water.
there was a 6th century BC wrestler names Milo of Croton who famously won more Olympic wrestling than any other.
they say as a young man he picked up a new calf and went for a walk and he did that every day till it was a grown bull , progressive overload as they would call it now.
because he carried it every day he was what you might call impossibly strong.
Grief is going to feel like that , when my wife passed from cancer last year a very smart person was able to tell me grief doesn't go away. You get better at carrying it.
so Be Milo carry that 50 pound beaver till you could go for a jog with it.
While you are carrying that 50 pound beaver , make a new friend , reconnect with other relatives or another old friend , schedule something weekly if you can even if it is a phone call or supper.
what they may not know is while you spend time with them they are helping you carry that 50 pound beaver for a bit. then you can take it's full weight again in the next quiet time.
there isn't a time line
just a warning , you might lose patients for peoples "first world" problems , find empathy you seldom saw before, and see the world in a very different way than you were accustomed to.
figure out what you want to do with the time you have left and do it
and carry the weight of all those you have lost it gets easier to carry as you get stronger. you will trip or have a branch catch your foot , feel it , get up and keep going with the life you enjoy. one day you will be the weight someone else is carrying.