tacran
Posted : 10/6/2008 12:02:23 AM
I know what you mean about not realizing how young someone was when they died -- I had a friend in high school whose mother died of brain cancer a few years before we met (I think my friend was about 10). She spoke of her mother's death relatively often, and I definitely recognized the gravity of her loss, and I felt sorry for her when she described her mother's condition or when she'd talk about having to go to her father with issues that a mother might handle. However, it wasn't until I was older that I could really understand how tragic it was, how young her mother was, and how that affected her whole family so profoundly. The course of her life was deeply affected by it, which I'm sure you've found is the same for you.
Anne makes a good point, too, which is that just "hanging out" can be very important. My friend's husband died at age 32 of a sudden illness, and I was 3,000 miles away, not knowing how I could be any help at all since I wasn't nearby. I decided to send little "Thinking of You" packages every few weeks - books, trinkets, special snacks, etc. Mainly they were something to find in the mailbox other than sympathy cards. I don't know if they helped, but it was all I could think of at the time. Maybe you could just go over and watch a movie together or take a walk if she's up to it.
Again, I can't even imagine being in her shoes or yours --- I'm so, so sorry. My heart goes out to her son and husband.