Loss of both parents - impact on mental health

I’m just wondering if anyone has any thoughts on the impact of both your parents dying. I I’ve lost both my parents in the last year and a half. My mother had had had dementia for years - so in many ways I lost her in terms of her personality and ability to talk to me about  5 years ago (she had dementia for 10 years). My dad was lucid til the end. However my dad was emotionally and verbally abusive to me throughout my life - constantly critical, insulting me on a regular basic, never complimenting me or thanking me for anything I did for him, judgemental, and never ever said sorry to me for anything during my entire life. Not ever affectionate towards me. He was occasionally helpful in practical ways though - for example her taught me to drive, lent me money to buy my car - things like that. But overall my dad had a crushing impact on my self esteem - and when I got my autism diagnosis I couldn’t even tell him because I knew he would mock it and not believe I was autistic - in the end I asked my brother to tell him - and when he did my dad didn’t say anything at all to me about it til months later - when discussing something else and I was saying it was hard for me because I have anxiety he said mockingly and sneeringly “I though you were autistic?” . Anyway - he caused me so much hurt and pain throughout my life. I remember that if I ever cried his standard response was to laugh and say I was “being silly”. 


Anyway - he died earlier this year. I was upset as anyone would be when their parent dies, it’s sort of instinctive and automatic- but mixed in with that we’re feeling of relief to know that he couldn’t say mean things to me anymore, and I wouldn’t have that feeling of dread and anxiety in my stomach when I had to go round to see him. At the funeral I didn’t cry at all and felt a kind of emptiness or nothingness, numbness, it just felt unreal. And then I got launched straight into the house clearing and I have found that completely overwhelming - my dad hadn’t thrown anything out after my mum died because he soon became ill himself after my mum died and wasn’t well enough to address throwing anything out - and hadn’t for years. So the task has been huge and often emotionally draining as well. I’m an executor of the estate and have struggled with aspects of that too. 

What’s happened over the last few weeks is that I’ve started to feel more and more stressed and overwhelmed and I’m really not coping well at all. My husband is a lovely man and hes helping in practical ways but in terms of organising things and making decisions (and we have so many decisions to make right now regarding this including issues around us moving house and area and him maybe leaving his job now too if we choose to move) - all the decisions are left to me and I’m struggling so much to know what’s best and what to do. I don’t have any close friends who I can turn to for help or advice. My brother is totally selfish and never offers any help - and if I ask for help he doesn’t say no - he’s just evasive and changes the subject. 

I feel so overwhelmed and so vulnerable, so lonely in having to make all these decisions and sort everything out. The responsibility of dealing with the estate is too much for my capabilities- I’ve never been any good at handling money or legal things - it worries me so much and I’m so stressed it’s starting to make me feel genuinely ill. I’m experiencing physical pain I think because the stress is prompting tension and inflammation in my body. 
in desperation I phoned the Samaritans the other day and cried during the entire call. But I understand that they can’t even offer a word of advice - and really what I need is help and advice.

Gosh this post is so long! I wanted to ask people on here about complex grief and if they have any experience of this. My dad was SO horrible to me for most of my life - but his death has left me feeling so vulnerable and insecure. It’s struck me that even though he made me feel awful virtually all these decisions time he was still ‘a dad’ - psychologically having parents is on some level a sense of security and safety - even when in practice they make you feel insecure and terrible and rubbish about yourself. And when my son asked me “did you love your dad?” I became so upset because I realised that I did - and I felt so terrible to feel love for someone who was so abusive to you - I feel like such an idiot and a fool for that. How can you love someone who’s consistently horrible to you? Surely that makes me a fool? A victim who loves her abuser is a completely dysfunctional person surely? An idiot? 

I just feel totally overwhelmed, stressed, confused, and lonely in many ways because I feel I’m shouldering all this responsibility whilst dealing with such a mess of complex mental and emotional issues (even though my youngest lives with us and is the best person on the planet I don’t want to burden him with all of this as he has his own problems). The slightest problem is tipping me over the edge now - I realise I’m approaching some kind of breaking point. Yesterday the only way I could cope was to sort of shut down - I’ve been experiencing disassociation and just want to run away from it all. But I can’t I e got too much to do and I have to be here for my son - and where would I go anyway? 

Does anyone have any thoughts or advice on this? Sorry for the crazily long post! 

Parents
  • Hello Kate. I’m so sorry for your losses and how they have understandably affected you so deeply. Loss is hard enough for anyone to cope with but when you have autism I think it’s even harder because we have a lot more to try to process and cope with than a neurotypical person.

    I lost both of my parents during my teens. I was 13 when my mum passed away. We were very close and to me she was that special person who could read me like a book. She understood everything about me, she never judged and she was always there. Losing her was hell for me. And yet I didn’t cry. At first her death seemed to not affect me at all but slowly over time the grief began to surface and I struggled immensely trying to make sense of it.

    My dad was abusive towards me. I won’t go into details as it will trigger me and probably everybody else too. But I had a hate/love relationship with him. I spent most of my life hating on my dad because he was horrible to me. After my mum died he was especially bad and he seemed to spend every waking hour making my life a misery.

    But I loved him too. He was my dad. He took me to school, he watched films with me and my sister, he read to me before bed. He did all those ‘dad’ things that dad’s do and I loved him for that. Personality wise he wasn’t a nice man, I won’t be a hypocrite. As a person I hated him. As a dad, I thought he was great.

    I want you to know that you aren’t bad or wrong or an idiot for loving your dad. A lot of people who were abused whether it physically, emotionally or sexually can still like their abusers and miss them when they aren’t in their lives anymore.

    That doesn’t make you stupid. It isn’t bad to love someone who mistreated you. It’s just the way us humans are. We generally love those closest to us, even if they are horrible.

    That just shows you are a genuinely kind and thoughtful person!

    Everything you are experiencing is completely normal in my opinion. When things get too much one of the bodies instant reactions to keep us safe to shutdown so you can get some much needed rest physically and mentally. It’s huge when somebody you love dies, and my experience has been mostly the same. I had a lot of shutdown and a lot of emotional turbulence. It got better but it takes time. It wasn’t an overnight fix. You need to be patient with yourself and give yourself time.

    My mental health suffered a bit but luckily that’s now under control.

    It might be worth looking into reaching out for support with a grief counsellor, somebody professional who can help navigate you through the difficult emotions and teach you how to process this grief and cope with what’s happening to you. I did this after a couple of years and found it really helpful. In hindsight I wish I had sought grief counselling sooner than I did. But I know it doesn’t work for everybody.

    I lost my dad when I was 16. Life with him was generally awful, especially after my mum passed away. But despite all the things he did and said I miss him now. Going through the grief was awful. I really struggled to cope because it became just me and my sister, whilst trying to understand what was happening with social services and care support.

    During my own grief I’ve learned it’s important to be kind to yourself and to give yourself time to process and understand the grief. There’s no right or wrong way to feel and given time it will get easier.
    It still hurts, I don’t think you ever stop missing those who you loved but it becomes manageable and you can function again. Reach out for support when you need to, whether that’s your son (he will want to be there for you), Samaritans, a counsellor, or here – seems like a friendly community who is happy to support you.

    Feel free to reach out to me anytime. Sending positive vibes.

  • I don't think it is just the processing which is difficult, but ND can also feel emotions differently.

    It is why there is alexithymia.

    Separating from people can also be harder.

    A month ago I agreed not to see my therapist for 3 weeks and I felt lost and abandoned for a few hours when I walked away. Was very strange.

  • Separating from people can also be harder.

    A month ago I agreed not to see my therapist for 3 weeks and I felt lost and abandoned for a few hours when I walked away. Was very strange.

    Agreed it is really difficult. My first counsellor worked with me for a couple of years and I found it so difficult when she left and I had to get used to a new counsellor. I started to think of my old one as a friend, and I felt that lost and abandonment feelings after she was gone.

    You get used to people and you always expect them to be there and when they aren't it's hard.

Reply
  • Separating from people can also be harder.

    A month ago I agreed not to see my therapist for 3 weeks and I felt lost and abandoned for a few hours when I walked away. Was very strange.

    Agreed it is really difficult. My first counsellor worked with me for a couple of years and I found it so difficult when she left and I had to get used to a new counsellor. I started to think of my old one as a friend, and I felt that lost and abandonment feelings after she was gone.

    You get used to people and you always expect them to be there and when they aren't it's hard.

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