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Lost my only son 
Started by Sweetcaroline72
13 Oct 2023, 10:47 AM

I don't know where to start I'm not a public person I'm pretty quiet but since I lost my son unexpectedly within a 3 week period to cancer I feel like I'm being eaten alive by the pain and the grief and missing him I don't even know how to cope. He was the only child I had, he was 26 looked perfectly healthy took care of himself ate right exercised did yoga and meditation, ran for the cure ffs and we didn't even know he was sick until he got sick thought it was a stomach flu I don't even know what do with my life He was my world it was 2 years March 22 2023 and it feels like yesterday. It don't even know what pain and grief is until you lose your child I am lost I feel broken and I wish I had someone to talk to that understood I found this whether I stay or not is undecided like I said I'm usually private person that keeps her problems to herself but I need to find new ways to deal with this because the pain is killing me on a daily basis and it might be helpful to have someone who understood what I'm feeling it's horrible you know trying to live your life after you've lost someone so important and you try to find meaning in what seems like a meaningless world
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Reply by Mert
15 Oct 2023, 12:02 AM

Dear SWEETCAROLINE72,

I am moved by your post, and feeling great empathy for your overwhelming grief.  My son has cancer.  In our cae the journey is slow: a diagnosis of cancer (shocking since my son like yours lived a healthy life including being a marathoner); treatment, surgery, radiation, apparent remission; then the cancer back again, now with regular chemo and other complications created by the years of invasive treatments.  I can't imagine getting the news and facing the death all within 3 weeks.  My journey with grief and pain continues but at least for now my son is still with us.

I read two things in your post that struck me:  first you said  "I wish I had someone to talk to that undeerstood" and second "I need to find new ways to deal with this because the pain is killing me". And I thought about my friend who lost her daughter to cancer three years ago as someone who might be able to meet both those needs.  What follows is what she wrote in response to my request to share her journey with you:

"Losing someone changes you.  Losing a child changes everything for the rest of your life.  Your grief is your response to the deep love you had for your son, the most profound love of a mother for her child.  Although the physical relationship has ended, the love never dies."

"As a mother who lost her only daughter what I have found that was helpful is:
Reaching out: you've done this---Good for you! You need someone who won't tell you to 'get over it' but will affirm your grief and help you navigate the roller coaster of emotions it takes you on.
I found working with a trained therapist was very helpful.  My grief was not a problem to be solved, it was an experience to be carried.  It was about finding a path to walk alongside my grief, not to make the loss of my child disappear."
"I came across a model created by a grief counsellor who had formed it out of what she learned working with a mother after the death of her child.  The mother had expected that in time her grief would shrink and become a much smaller part of her life.  But what happened was different.  The grief stayed just as big but her life grew around it.  The counsellor's name is Lois Tonkin. Reading about this model helped me to understand that I would never be 'over' the grief of losing my daughter, but that there would be days that I would be able to move on with other parts of my life. I realized that I could 'grow' a new life which included the loss of my daughter."
"My final suggestion is just getting out in the fresh air, wialking in nature. It helps you connect to the present instead of spending a lot of time thinking about the past.  Walking also helps to get sleep back on track.  Walking with others may lead to helpful conversations; walking side-by-side makes difficult conversations easier than talking face to face.

Now a last word from me. I was struck by the words "whether I stay or not is undecided" and wondered whether you were in your darkest moments thinking of ending your own life.  I understand the lure of that when you are in such excruciating and ongoing pain but I sincerely hope that the life force that prompted you to reach out for help will continue to sustain you and lead you towards supports that will make it possible to,  as my friend says, 'grow a new life that includes the loss of your son'. 

Holding you in my heart,   Mert
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Reply by Noelle
17 Jul 2025, 12:47 PM

Dear SweetCaroline1:

I am very, very sorry for the loss of your only son and I have shared many of the same emotions that you are feeling.  My only son has a terminal illness but had seemed very healthy before.  So, it was a shock to learn of the seriousness of his illness.  I spent the first year and a half feeling as you say, "eaten alive by the pain and grief".  However, my grief made me wonder where do people go after dying?  I had a very strong need to find the answer to my question.  In my research I came across the term, "Near Death Experience (NDE).  I learned that most of the people who had NDEs were those who had actually died but were medically revived; they then went on to share their stories about what they experienced in the Afterlife before being revived.  These NDE stories were uplifting
and comforting to me.

You may find some degree of comfort in reading Dr. Bruce Greyson's book titled, "AFTER" which can be purchased from Amazon.ca.  Also, you might want to listen to the stories of people who are sharing their NDE experiences with others on the YOUTUBE channel called, "Coming Home" by Anthony Chene.  Learning about Near Death Experiences really helped me to begin my healing journey which continues to this day because between the book and my listening to people's NDE stories on YOUTUBE, I have been given a strong comforting feeling that my son will be fine when it is my son's time to go into the Afterlife.  

I hope this posting will give you some comfort and peace, SweetCaroline1.
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