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So now your mil AND your father are at peace. Grieve, and rest -- it will take time to wrap your head around how different your life will be now.

And all the settling of your father's estate will be someone ELSE'S worry and headache, since there is no will. At some point down the road, the money in those CDs or account or whatever they will will go to you and your brother. Or not. You said you never cared about any of that, anyway.

How is your brother doing? Did he keep in contact with your father during the final weeks?

I'd stay out of your stepmother's life. It was what she clearly wanted.
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DH and I were astonished at how long it took us to get our feet back under us... first after they were no longer in our home, but still more after we had so many passings in a short period of time.

We thought it would be a couple of months... it was closer to a year before we started to really feel like we could see our “real selves” again after so many years of constant emergencies and caregiving. Even now, at about 1.5 years, there are still some lingering responses/exhaustion.

I hope for you that it comes back quicker:)
As far as happy memories, I did not have a good childhood either. I take the few good things, hold onto them as gifts, and have had to let the rest go. That doesn’t work for everyone, but I find the less I give to situations that I have zero control over, the more quality my life has in the here and now.

My hope for you is that you get time to read a book, watch a sunset, laugh with DH about anything at all:)
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Dorker, so sorry for your loss. I understand the trauma of seeing a family member dying - the images you describe of your dad are very similar to those I remember of my father before he died last year. I think it's probably normal at this early stage to keep going over and over the things you've seen and the whole end of life experience. Maybe it's how the brain processes and makes sense of it all at a time when everything is changing. I am glad you can think of your dad being at peace now - this thought really helped me in those early days, and also I really tried hard to focus on some good memories, which helped too. Perhaps your new freedom from elderly care will take some time to sink in and get used to, and that is understandable too. These are early days, so take care of yourself and try to look forwards to what will and can be in the future - things you can influence - rather than looking back at what has gone before, and that you cannot change.
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Dorker, many of us know exactly what you mean because we have been exactly where you are. Praying that you grieve them well and that you will feel your joy peeking through soon!
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Dorker--

You put it so succinctly. What was your 'norm' 4 months ago is now entirely a different 'norm'.

Even though your families were stressful to deal with (to say the least) you kept your dignity and love of them on the forefront and I applaud you for that.

Time now for you and DH to grieve, separately and together for what was, what was and to look forward to what is to come.

I am a 'woman of faith' and believe that death is simply the soul leaving the body and walking (often VERY gratefully) through that door we call mortality into an existence free from stress and pain. Leaving LO's behind who may mourn, but know that the next life is promised to be so much more wonderful than anything we can imagine.

Funny, isn't it, that all the things you had to fuss over are suddenly gone. A few odds and ends in dad's case, since he has a surviving spouse, but in MIL's case, it's a book closed and done with.

Makes us think, doesn't it? How much of what we fuss over is truly worth the fussing. (Yet, I still fuss, and always will!)

Prayers for you, as you go forward finding joy in your life with no aging parents and their needs. You deserve a break--I hope you take it.
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Odd space to be in. I suppose it gets better with time.

This time last week, I was trying with no success at all, to reach my dad in the NH he'd been previously placed in the day prior. Calls to his room ... unanswered. Calls to the nurse desk, .. told "all are busy with other patients, I'll have the nurse call you back".

No phone call, no ability to get an answer by calling his room, until later in the day when I did get a phone call from the nurse who discovered the phone in his room, not working .. and had ordered a new one to be placed in his room and her report, he is struggling to breathe, have upped his oxygen .. but other than that is doing okay.

That was this time last week, after having him xfer'd the day prior to that setting, and the day prior to that the hullabaloo of completing a long awaited (now useless) POA .. and the complications thereof .. all done via a glass partition and his ability to understand/comprehend, even hear the goings on ... all dicey to say the least.

The days prior to that, ... helping in the role of trying to dial in on a suitable spot for NH. All while, Covid restricts one's ability to visit, get a feel for, see/smell, walk around, talk to staff, etc.

Then on Sunday .. a 1:30 AM phone call that he is being taken to the ER .. respiratory distress. Clothes on . off I go to the ER . and all culminating to .. less than week later, he is at peace, .. and gone.

Weird space ... to get one's footing under them .. in the realization those phone calls of need/urgency as to issues, they're over.

One lives on "alert" in some measure for so long .. that it's hard to change gears and realize that high alert status . you can put it away .. it's over.

Over reaching visual that plays out .. how frail/how very frail and awful he looked at the end, . how sick he was .. his gasping for air (before the morphine/ativan kicked in and took him to another realm entirely) and then the visual of his mouth gaped open . and not at all with us in this realm in any longer, the dying process.

Talking to DH about it who has much the same visual as his mom less than a month ago, took her last breaths on this earth. DH says that he makes a conscious effort .. to think back on good memories, their days camping as kids, her as scout leader for his scout troop as a young boy .. the many summer vacations taken as a family and her young and vigorous.

I guess in time mine will improve and that visual will wane .. and maybe some happier times will replace that visual. I try to at this point, remember some of them . but they escape me . not all sure there are very many . being this was a dad who was mostly absent my life ..

Weird place to be.

Glad .. grateful he is no longer struggling .. but .. left with kind of a need to get my legs under me in the new path forward, with no elderly in the midst . in need and urgency to call upon me. Will be new. It's been a long long time since my life hasn't included the need to check on an elderly.
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Sincere condolences, Dorker. Please take care of yourself. Let your family be there for YOU, for a change.
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I am so sorry for your loss, and yet I know the relief you feel by it as well, knowing your father is no longer suffering.

Stay strong and do not allow yourself to get sucked into the inevitable DRAMA that is currently erupting with stepmom. I feel for her as she is clearly unhinged. She probably won't last long without her husband, especially since he was the center of her universe.
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Oh Dorker. I'm so sorry for your loss.
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So many prayers for you, Dorker. Stepsis is going to have a hard time of it, that is clear, but you have a good plan with regard to Stepmom. You deserve time to heal and have reflected the face of God to your Dad during all of this. I hope you are able to get some rest.
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Thank you for all you have shared. I know many of us feel that it is somewhere around the corner for our parent etc. Sometimes that corner keeps stretching and stretching while what we try to do becomes more and more confusing. Add Covid to all this and life can seem incredibly difficult at times. Personally I also am feeling very stressed about what is going on in the country. I worry about my adult children and hope they will have a strong future. At times my obvious efforts to get communication to my mother gets overlooked and I have to go over it in detail. I just also can wonder how long as everything slowly but clearly is diminishing. I appreciate all you have imparted and learning how these 2 ends took place. You certainly gave it your best.
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I’m sorry for your loss. Prayers for you during this difficult time.
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Dorker
I am so sorry you have lost your dad. I’m happy for him that he has slipped free of the pain and confusion and worry his last days (months)seemed to have been. I try to imagine SM and her existence. I can’t. Life marches on. Ready or not.
‘You’ve been a great daughter. He was lucky to have you. Wishing you restful nights and good memories.
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Dorker,

It's been a long, long haul for you. Time to rest and heal.

There's really nothing to do now, but deal with the aftereffects of 2 deaths close together.

You made your peace with dad, a small miracle. You were there for him. You have that to remember and you did all you could.

Step MIL is NOT your problem. Let her daughter do the work. She's not close to you and wouldn't probably want you to step in.

StepMIL is going to need people around her, and probably needs to be placed in a ASL of some kind, but that's not your look out.

Be gentle for your own sense of well being. You've been tough and caring for a long time.

I'm not sorry your dad is gone. He is truly in a better place.

((Hugs))
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My thoughts are with you , and your family.. now once this over you need a huge break.
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Dorker, I’m sorry for your loss but agree that your father is now free from pain and responsibility. Glad you are able to be kind but maintain boundaries. Hope your bro and BB don’t pester you in all this.
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Has your mother-in-law given anyone a Durable, general POA?

If not, well, it's not your problem.

I realize you've tried to be a good, caring daughter-in-law; but, there comes a time when you have to think of yourself & your own physical/emotional well being.

I didn't & I'm sorry I didn't. If I'd not allowed my sense of duty to rob me of a life for myself, I'd not have come to resent what I allowed to dictate what I could & couldn't do.

You don't mention if you're still married to her son& if he is still living. That's an important factor to take into consideration.

Since you don't mention him, I can only presume he is out-of-the-picture.

I highly suggest you resign from the position you've allowed yourself to take up.

If there are issues you haven't brought up, then my advice is only as good as the information I used to base it.
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I know there's a time difference, but here it is a beautiful still morning. The sky has lightened with that just washed by rain look. Just the sort of morning for a peaceful slip away.

Dorker, your Father has peace now after his long battle. He fought right till the very end didn't he?

I am so glad you feel at peace. (((Hugs))) from the other side of the world to you today.
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Dorker,

So very sorry for your loss. Take care, many hugs for you!
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Dear Dorker, I'm so sorry for your loss. Please take care of yourself.
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(cont'd)

she didn't remember having been at the hospital. Don't know where she thought she was the prior 24/36 hours .. who can say.

I guess her daughter informed her that her husband is gone.

Her daughter says it will take her a couple of days to reorient and some rest.

I haven't called her, . .don't really know.
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My dad passed away yesterday AM

Not before stepmom onsight with all her crazy hanging out there at Hospice.

Had been insistent she was staying the night. I knew, . .that's not gonna end well, .. night .. out of her element at home .. it won't go well.

And it didn't.

I tried to persuade her she needs to go home and rest, not gonna happen. Tried to get her daughter to argue the point. She did, .. argue the point, her daughter lost. Not gonna happen.

Before I left, I let the nurse desk know what they were likely in for and provided the phone number for stepsister.

I got a call at almost 6 AM yesterday AM that someone will need to come get stepmom and she can no longer be allowed her without attendant, and she cannot spend the night any more. She'd worried the staff all night long with her delusions. Bugging them every 20/30 mins that they have got to, got to do it right now, call my DH .. that he has called about the burial plot.

Delusional.

There is no burial plot, dad is being cremated. My DH hasn't called anyone about any of this ... much less her. And the staff there at Hospice, don't know my DH from the housecat. Call "DH", Call DH" .... on and on it went, all night.

That and .. stepmom at their desk at one point frantic .. that the patient in bed wasn't dad but her daughter .. and she's not talking back to her .. she won't speak.

It's a wonder (and it would've probably been best for all involved) she didn't get a psych hold there in the same hospital. Probably should've.

I knew she was off .. way off .. when I had to just leave earlier in the day before she spent the night. Her crazy hanging out for all to see ... her telling me that dad had talked to her just an hour before I got there (he was no longer responding, to anyone/anything) .. "yea wow . that's good", her asking me, .. has he talked to me, "No .. he hasn't talked to me". Her: "I don't understand that, he talked to me just an hour ago ... I just knew he'd perk up when you got here".

That and many more examples of it all.

But she was intent to spend the night. I was intent to leave .. and dismiss myself from the crazy (I have zero patience with it, . I can help with a lot of things but have learned I have zero patience with Dementia). I had to just leave .... exiting I stopped at nurse desk to tip them off as to what's to come with stepmom there setting up camp.

Sure enough, .. almost 6 AM .. staff calling that someone needs to come get her ... she can't be here . and she can no longer come here unattended and cannot spend the night. I told them (again) to call her daughter.

Then asked for a read on dad and any changes. Was told that it was really surprising he made it through the night. No longer any BP .. feet mottling badly. Didn't expect he'd make it through the day.

I was doing a couple of things to get ready to go there, one last visit .. and got a call that he wasn't expected to live another 15/20 mins . actively dying.

I couldn't of gotten there in that time frame, so abandoned any plan to go there. Got the call, like clockwork . in 15 mins . that he was gone.

I'm at peace with it .. he suffered so .. and was so wracked with ill health in the more recent times. He's at peace now.

And as for me and .. stepmom.

I will get my feet under me .. and navigate my way through to not completely abandon her, . but walk a walk of .. someone staying in touch while not stepping, at all, into any role of c'giver .. to her dementia .. or otherwise .. just a friendly phone call perhaps here and there, . or a plate of leftovers .. if we per se . have a bque here, .. simple ... non committal type things.

All I know of her . and the news that her husband of 50 plus years is gone .. is that she did leave the hospital that AM when asked to do so .. (drove herself .. yes ... accident waiting to happen). Later that AM when her daughter called her .. she was so disoriented she didn't
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Dorker, big hugs and strength to you for this next turn of events! You are a good daughter. Prayers that everything you need to do for your father’s care and final arrangements will go smoothly. God has gone before you and none of this is a surprise to Him!

How is the rest of your immediate family doing? Is DH dealing ok with his mom’s passing? Has DD continued with talk therapy and AD meds? Take care of yourself, dear Dorker!

Edited to add: Absolutely, hospice was the right choice!
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I'm so sorry!
I'm just here adding a "thumbs up" to your decision to get him into hospice and sending ((virtual hugs)) to you.
This too shall pass.

What a year, eh?
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(cont'd)

Long long ago learned our place in the pecking order ... somewhere below the dirt under your feet .. long ago came to terms with it.

It's a dichotomy. There are those who would celebrate .. and relish in . . "Well so there you ole bat .. you reaped what you sowed".

I don't. I find it incredibly sad . and I'm sorrow filled for her and her plight oncoming .. and so . yes . lessons to be learned in it . and I think I have lived my life opposite of how she has .. and intend to keep doing so .. and connections/relationships .. they are important.

But lessons that would mandate that I continue to at least reach out to her .. stay connected. I don't know .. I don't know how that would even look, or if I care to take any initiative to do so.

It's all so sad . in my dad's last days/weeks here .. him still able to somewhat communicate . and him expressing his dismay at his wife's loneliness . and his worry of what will become of her . .that her daughter doesn't take as much interest in her mom as he'd like to see .. that she isn't one to go engage socially . him worried about her plight ahead with him (I don't think he was thinking in terms of I'm going to die, . though that is certainly the case ... I think his thinking was more along the lines of .. I will no longer be residing there) ... his worry of her plight to come.

My only answer to him when he'd bring it up .. "Dad you can't focus on that which you can't change". And then I'd change the subject.

It is so sad though.
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(cont'd)

This is a woman . old school to the hilt ... my dad was her world, her focus, her anchor in a now adrift mind.

She still lives in their marital home . and it really surprises me that she hasn't gotten out and gotten lost .. or burned the house down .. leaving a pot on the stove .. or fallen and been unable to get up and no one to help her ..

She has certainly fouled up some things financially . that my dad had me go undo . and fix . in the last several weeks.

I can't even begin to fathom the sadness that her life is about to roll into. This isn't a woman who was on the tennis team at the country club or the bridge club ... or ladies tea circle, . none of that. My dad was her whole world always .. a.l.w.a.y.s. ALWAYS. Even before their health began to fail and certainly in these last few years with all his ailments.

She has nothing . in the way of other relationships to tie her to anything or anyone. Nothing. Her two sisters .. one lives fairly close but sounds like that sister is pretty self absorbed . a busy busy sister .. and always out and about with her many social events and her own grown kids, g'kids . and doesn't spend much time with stepmom .. and the other sister lives a little farther away .. but . .. doesn't come around much.

She has her daughter .. who lives between her and her other home over in the panhandle of the state ... and her daughter with her own mental frailties can only take her mom in small doses. They are very much like oil and water and can find themselves sideways in a boat with one another routinely.

Pondering some that .. as to what is to become of stepmom . in conversation with DH this morning. DH stating, . "the thing to do is to not lose touch with her .. stay a part of her life .. call and check on her".

To my response: "Ya know ... I don't know . navigating all that .. let me tell you . she is going to be the one on the other end of need .. health wise and sooner rather than later, . but she has always been so very confoundingly private .. even taking exception with me when present at dad's medical visit that I would have the audacity to speak up and ask questions of doctors/HC professionals .. you don't do that . they are like GODS . you don't ask questions . you don't bother them, they're too busy. That's why they went to school for a hundred years .. they're the ones that know what to do.

She truly did find it appalling and offensive that I would

A) be a part of any of those settings ... upset with my dad routinely for asking me to come and be a presence.

B) have the unmitigated gall to speak up ....

Saying to DH .. "ya know, I have absolutely zero . minus zero interest in engaging in that .. on her behalf ... none . zip .. nadda .. I don't care to fight city hall to advocate on her behalf .. I just don't care enough to stand in that gap .. I truly don't . her own daughter isn't even allowed by her to go to doc visits . and shut the front door .. go to the back . where she is seen by an MD ... h377 would freeze over .. and that's her own daughter. I just don't care enough to stand in that fight .. I just don't.

So ... ???.... I mean what, . stay on touch with her, invite her for special occasions . bdays/holidays . the like .. she can't find her way outside of her own comfort zone of 5 or 6 miles within her radius of her home .. I'd have to go get her and then take her home. I just don't know that I care enough to take that much initiative to be honest. And it's not from any standpoint of .. though it is there ... how much did she "not" include me and my brother thru the years as the proverbial .. red headed step children quote unquote. There is that underlying it all.

So now she nears the end of her days .. and her anchor .. now cut loose . and she adrift ... no longer an anchor to her world .. and no real connections/relationships in anyone or anything .. and her steps .. me and my brother ..
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(cont'd)

As I've needed this or that w/regard to insurance or finances .. her the only one that stand a prayer of going into that house to look at anything .. certainly not me.

Her explaining she's been in that cabinet numerous times and hasn't seen anything of any cremation plan but will look again.

Her ultimately answering that she didn't find anything at all.

So now it became a detective show ...

I know where her mom's parents are buried . let's call them . perhaps they have on record .. the cremation plan and paperwork as to what is to be done, etc etc.

Only I don't have time and certainly don't want to sit in my dad's room . where it's presumed those nearing death can still hear . and discuss all this.

SIL who I've helped so much thru the years .. "Hey I can do that, I'll just pretend to be you .. want me to help with that?". SIL all the way in IL .. and not a vested interest one in any of this. Took on that task thankfully.

Gave her the pertinent info, dad's name, DOB . last 4 of SSN .. his home addy . etc .. see what you can find out.

She called . pretending to be me .. (they wouldn't know me if the stepped on me). Ultimately the story found there ... there is a burial plot there, . yes, .. assigned to stepmom by her parents graves .. and the instructions are that she is to be buried there, in a coffin .. (who knows if that's what she'll ultimately choose for her own remains . if she's even capable anymore of choosing) . and that my dad is to be cremated . she will have her ashes in her coffin.

That .. is the plan.

No substantiation found anywhere that any of this is prepaid ..

Where is his wife/stepmom .. why can't we just ask her, .. "hey obviously the guy is not going to live much longer, . what is it you guys had in mind, where are the documents .. "

She is too far gone mentally to be able to put those pieces together.

Asking of Stepsister .. "well .. all I know to do .. I can go to the same place that handled MIL's cremation . and get that in order .. I have to do it now though .. once dad dies . the signed checks I have from him .. the POA .. it's all null and void once he's gone .. so I need to do it now ... all I know to do is go do that .. and pay for it, but I hate to do that if somewhere there already exists a prepaid cremation .. "

Stepsister agreed .. just go pay for it .. I can't find it and she isn't mentally together enough to know what/where/how.

So left the Hospice unit and set out to get that done .. taken care of now.

Yes, I have POA and I could've gone to the bank . where his joint checking is, with POA in hand .. but time is of the essence.

1. With Covid you no longer can just waltz into a bank's lobby and expect to be seen. You have to make an appt

2. Whatever their procedures are, . it's likely that the POA docs would have to be sent to a higher corporate level before allowing me access to what is their joint checking.

3. The risk ... it's a joint checking acct, he and his wife. What if they come back .. "we need POA for the other account owner too . can't allow her access to the joint checking without POA on both acct owners".

I don't have time for all that horse manure.

The POA was just done this past Thursday the day before he wa xfer'd to the NH . and only then because it's now going to be self pay for the NH . and funds will need to be jockeyed around to pay for same . and it just so happened that the rehab center .. now allowing visits ... with limits (all done thru glass separation) ... for same.

So not like I've had this POA for months now and why did I sit on my arse and not go get this done. It's only a few days old, this POA.

So, in the end, I went to the funeral home we dealt with for MIL's cremation mere weeks ago .. and got it set up for dad's .. and any hour now that will come.

Other musings ... I can't even begin to fathom what will become of stepmom.
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Quite surprised there was no middle of the night phone call. But then again, .. was surprised when I called the Hospice unit to check on any changes. Was told that earlier when they removed his face mask to do some mouth care .. that he protested. I don't think him at all capable of having any kind of conversation, not in that sense. But .. did try to blurt out some sense of protest.

That's more "here" and "present" than was my experience being there visiting.

I know that I made the absolute 1000% correct decision in going the path of hospice.

I know that these last several months, .. all of it stemming from that phone call from stepmom, . complaining he won't "help her" to help him get up .. him sitting in the chair, feces everywhere, dipping his hands in it, trying to eat it ... or whatever that was about .. this back in April I guess, .. I don't remember.

From there forward .. his dx of UTI and Sepsis .. and it's been downhill ever since. Round trips in and out of hospitals and rehabs .. and back and forth . on the carousel .. and dx of pneumonia more than once, .. and Cdiff .. and just on and on it has gone.

Him complaining a lot more in recent weeks (but of course, he was on IV antibiotics yet again, for another bout of pneumonia) .. them coming to get him for PT .. and him arguing . not wanting to participate.

Unable to. Too weak.

I'm the one that made the call the other day. Him now in the ER .. and of course, Hospice now brought into the fold .. and xfer imminent . and a Hospice worker asking of me .. do I wish to continue the IV antibiotic they have him on there, that it's optional.

And explanation . Hospice, .. about EOL and comfort care, not curative care. Me asking, .. "infection though?? what if it goes to raging infection .. when it's otherwise so preventable". Answer, .. that's why there are medications to keep him comfortable. I agreed, .. pull the antibiotic.

Fortunately .. stepmom isn't with it enough to have picked up on that little nuance. Lord knows she was angry as a bee in a bonnet about the fact there is a POA in existence .. and naming me as designate for same .. and even had to be escorted/exited outta there, by her daughter, as she bedside of dad .. gasping for air, choking ... and giving him a 3rd degree, expectation he will answer for his actions to have done a POA ... she'd already pushed back and caused quite the pushback .. on Hospice, as path forward.

Yesterday afternoon was all about final preparations for after his demise.

I could have sworn he'd told me that he

A) wants to be creamated

B) that it is already paid for, and said documents are in "that file cabinet"

C) that his ashes are to be interned to the same cemetery where his wife's parents are buried .. and those arrangements also .. already in place, and in "that file cabinet".

"That file cabinet" ... a file cabinet that sits in his office, .. that I have no more access to than the US Treasury. To get past his wife to even so much as touch the thing . would be a crime punishable by all sorts of hysteria .. at the very least.

How much more difficult these thing are when there is a spouse standing in opposition and argument to forward progress. So so much more difficult.

Approaching the hour we'll need those documents .. and knowing full well I have zero ability to access any of it. I called upon stepsister .. who .. even she meets resistance in her mom who is so very mistrusting . and even of her own daughter .. but her daughter stand a far greater chance of accessing "that file cabinet" than I ever would. Explaining to her, that my memory serves the above conversation . would you look around and see what documentation you can find .. Hospice is asking what funeral home to contact upon his demise, to remove the body.

Stepsister .. answering that she has been in "that file cabinet" numerous times . and she has . thru all this as I've needed this or
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Dorker - There is a light at the end of the tunnel for both you (figuratively) and your dad (literally though only he can see.) I feel relieved for you both. Your dad will soon be free from all his pain and suffering.

I am reading a book called "Final GIfts: Understanding the Special Awareness and Communications of the Dying." written by two hospice nurses. The chapter I'm on talks about how they dying waits and lingers on because there were things that still need to be resolved. One of the dying individuals was a young man who was estranged from his father. The young man tried to hang on for weeks in hopes his father would come and make peace, but sadly, despite the efforts from his mom and the priest, the father still rejected him till the end, and the young man died with no peace. The authors wrote, and I paraphrase, there are things worse than death, one of them is estrangement from your loved ones. Your MIL kept hanging on and hanging on. I suspect she was hoping for her estranged son to come and make peace before she died. Alas, that never came to pass. That's probably the saddest thing for a mother to bear: rejection by your child.
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Thinking of you Dorker.

I hope you, StepSis & StepMom can visit for any comfort it may bring him & you all.

Take care.
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