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Christdefinesme

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I am a grown woman with 4 kids and have been a Christain for many years, feel quite mature and solid in Christ, and yet, the loss of my parents makes me feel like a child. 2 1/2 years ago, my stepdad passed, a very unexpected and ugly death (brain stem stroke), and 9 months later, during my pregnancy with my 4th child, my mother passed away after 1 1/2 years of liver disease, after months of hospital stays, traumatic "scares" and recoveries, all during my pregnancy; another ugly, torturous death to watch. Back when I was 4 1/2 my biological father died from a brain bleed when he was hit on the head with a beer bottle, someone was trying to start a fight.
So, I feel very solid in Christ, He has definitely kept me centered. It just hurts, in a very strange, deep, achey way, and i feel like none of my friends understand, or even really want to listen to me process this stuff. I have great, committed, wonderful, true friends, I just know they don't really understand, they can't relate. They can't relate to how deep the trauma of death goes, they can't relate to the fact that I just can't get over the ugliness of death, the ugliness of watching someone completely lose who they are, the ugliness of watching your parents' bodies dependent on machines, tubes everywhere with all sorts of disgusting fluids coming out, going in, etc. The ugliness of things left unresolved. Not necessarily on my end, but on theirs. I know my mom and stepdad are with the Lord, but it doesn't take away the ugliness of what I've experienced. And I have not had anyone to talk to about it. Can anyone relate?
I Thank God Almighty for His Holy Spirit which has guarded and sustained me.
Amen.:crosseo:
 

TankGirl

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Bless you. What a terribly distressing time you have had.

My best friend lost her Dad, very suddenly, to a heart attack 18 months ago. On the day he died, her grandmother was diagnosed with cancer, and her Mum, hearing the news of her husband's death, collapsed with a catastrophic stroke. She died 3 1/2 weeks later. I found it desperately upsetting, and extremely traumatic to go through that with her.

I am sorry to say that I don't understand, first hand, what you've been through.

But I do, very much, care. :hug:
 
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thepianist

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:hug: :cry: My dear, I'm so sorry for what you have had to go through. Unless someone has lost at least one parent, they cannot truly understand.

My daddy died seven years ago....and I still miss him....I still cry and wonder why. I'm not mad at God, sorry to say my sister is. He is the one who holds the thread of life, and I will not be upset with Him. Daddy was an evangelist and reached several hundreds of people for Jesus during his lifetime. I praise the Lord for that.

My mother was diagnosed with cancer last summer, and of all the places - it was inside her eyeball!!! She had her eye removed, so far everything is okay - they got all the cancer. But it has really been a difficult time in my family. My husband and two kids have had to sacrifice a lot of time for me to be with her. I have two sisters and one brother, but still I am the main caregiver.

Please know, you are in my prayers. If you ever want to pm me, feel free to. :prayer:
 
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LovesToRead

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christdefinesme said:
I am a grown woman with 4 kids and have been a Christain for many years, feel quite mature and solid in Christ, and yet, the loss of my parents makes me feel like a child. 2 1/2 years ago, my stepdad passed, a very unexpected and ugly death (brain stem stroke), and 9 months later, during my pregnancy with my 4th child, my mother passed away after 1 1/2 years of liver disease, after months of hospital stays, traumatic "scares" and recoveries, all during my pregnancy; another ugly, torturous death to watch. Back when I was 4 1/2 my biological father died from a brain bleed when he was hit on the head with a beer bottle, someone was trying to start a fight.
So, I feel very solid in Christ, He has definitely kept me centered. It just hurts, in a very strange, deep, achey way, and i feel like none of my friends understand, or even really want to listen to me process this stuff. I have great, committed, wonderful, true friends, I just know they don't really understand, they can't relate. They can't relate to how deep the trauma of death goes, they can't relate to the fact that I just can't get over the ugliness of death, the ugliness of watching someone completely lose who they are, the ugliness of watching your parents' bodies dependent on machines, tubes everywhere with all sorts of disgusting fluids coming out, going in, etc. The ugliness of things left unresolved. Not necessarily on my end, but on theirs. I know my mom and stepdad are with the Lord, but it doesn't take away the ugliness of what I've experienced. And I have not had anyone to talk to about it. Can anyone relate?
I Thank God Almighty for His Holy Spirit which has guarded and sustained me.
Amen.:crosseo:

Dear Sister in the Lord,

Yes, I can understand you. I too am very new here and came in part to share things that are deep with other Christians.

I'm also a long-time committed Christian and feel the support of the Lord in all of this. But it does help to talk about it with other people too.

In February of this year, I lost my dear mother at the age of 89. She went from living totally independantly to having a massive brain-bleed stroke and being paralyzed totally on her right side. This literally happened overnight. Very devastating and very shocking.

So, I went into the intensive care to see my sweet mother, who the day before had been relating normally with the other people in her apartment, now lay helpless to say one single word. And looking like a nursing home patient. Mouth gaping, trying to make intelligible sounds, I'm sure she was trying to talk. Yes, ugly would very well describe the scene.:cry:

She died in less than a week, so in that we don't share something in common. It wasn't long and lingering, thank God.

I hope we can talk with each other to process. I also have good friends that can only help so far. I do have friends that understand, and that helps. But I also have close friends who still have both parents, and not only that, their parents are healthy and active.

I have more to share of the months that followed, but must get off for now to go get my son from work. Hope to share more with you later.

God Bless You.
 
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ArmouredSaint

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I can relate to what you typed here I just do not want to go into my own pain about this.You'd be alarmed how many people feel this way and it's normal
in every aspect. Do you know we process other peoples pain differently than our own? It's a concept we do without realizing it.Our pain is our pain.Your friends know your pain in their way and they can't relay that to you.I bet they feel what you feel,or at some point they will as the majority of us are going to deal with the tragedy of death and suffering.Goodnight and God Bless You.
 
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Christdefinesme

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You are right.
It is something to keep in mind, that only the Lord can take us through this, only He can touch and see and understand, because only He knows and sees all. I know that grief matures us if we walk through it in and with the Lord. I think it is so difficult to feel so isolated in it all, you know?
Thanks for your post, take care. I'll be praying for you. (I read one of your posts in the "grief" thread, it seems you've lost your girlfriend to suicide.....that is very tragic and I pray the Lord will lead you in processing this....).
Take care.
:prayer:
 
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marieg

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I understand how you feel, I watched my mother die a horrible death and it took me a year to remember what she looked like without the machines and tubes. For me it was when I asked the Lord to come into those memories that I started to see her as she was before all this happend. Also there might be some things that relate to those painful times that you need Gods healing touch. On my part also I had to start to let go, once I did that it made me feel better. I could start to think about the good things that we shared. I now never think about those bad things, I cannot remember those painful times watching someone you love die.

marieg
 
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jgt46

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I do understand what you feel. My dad died 4 and a half years ago. I still love him and miss him very much. This will never change. Somedays I cry a lot and others I don't. I know we all have to die because we sin. That god loves us very much. But as christians we have to suffer as christ did befiore he was crucifed fo us. Yes it is so hard at times to think of God loving us an giving us a future when we will be reunited with our loved ones. We have to be patient and pray to him to be our strength though the times of our overwhelming grief. He suffers when we do because he loves us more than any human can.
So we must rely on the rock that is christ.
 
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thepianist

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jgt46 said:
I do understand what you feel. My dad died 4 and a half years ago. I still love him and miss him very much. This will never change. Somedays I cry a lot and others I don't. I know we all have to die because we sin. That god loves us very much. But as christians we have to suffer as christ did befiore he was crucifed fo us. Yes it is so hard at times to think of God loving us an giving us a future when we will be reunited with our loved ones. We have to be patient and pray to him to be our strength though the times of our overwhelming grief. He suffers when we do because he loves us more than any human can.
So we must rely on the rock that is christ.
:cry: My heart goes out to you....I do understand your pain. My daddy died 7 years ago, so long ago - but just like yesterday. I know I'll see him again one day, just wish that would make the pain stop. All we can do is pray for the peace and comfort that only God can give us. You are in my prayers. :prayer:
 
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Christdefinesme

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LovesToRead said:
Dear Sister in the Lord,

Yes, I can understand you. I too am very new here and came in part to share things that are deep with other Christians.

I'm also a long-time committed Christian and feel the support of the Lord in all of this. But it does help to talk about it with other people too.

In February of this year, I lost my dear mother at the age of 89. She went from living totally independantly to having a massive brain-bleed stroke and being paralyzed totally on her right side. This literally happened overnight. Very devastating and very shocking.

So, I went into the intensive care to see my sweet mother, who the day before had been relating normally with the other people in her apartment, now lay helpless to say one single word. And looking like a nursing home patient. Mouth gaping, trying to make intelligible sounds, I'm sure she was trying to talk. Yes, ugly would very well describe the scene.:cry:

She died in less than a week, so in that we don't share something in common. It wasn't long and lingering, thank God.

I hope we can talk with each other to process. I also have good friends that can only help so far. I do have friends that understand, and that helps. But I also have close friends who still have both parents, and not only that, their parents are healthy and active.

I have more to share of the months that followed, but must get off for now to go get my son from work. Hope to share more with you later.

God Bless You.

So, how have you worked through this? Have you told your story, meaning, sitting, sharing details with someone, describing events and your response, etc.? Sometimes I wonder if I just need to write out my story, it seems like it might help me process, just to get it all out. One of my pastors asked me a few weeks ago how I was doing (my grandma, who I was very close to, also passed 1 1/2 mos ago, but it was a beautiful, healing death completely in the Lord's presence), and I talked with her a bit, and she said "you should write this all down, this what you've been through might be helpful for others". I blew it off a bit, thinking, "oh, that's just the mode she's in because she herself is in writing mode because she's been working on a book....". But, part of me wonders, because I feel that I just want to sit with someone and get it all out, if I just do need to write it down. I just don't know if it's gonna help much. I just wonder if you've sat and shared the whole story with someone, and if it helped.
 
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LovesToRead

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Hi thanks for writing and I'm glad to share what I've done. I would like to share one other thing first.

I came to this forum to find this kind of support. I've only been here for 2 weeks and am still figuring out the different areas. I've been blessed by all the nice people I've been meeting and look forward to sharing more.

Now to your question about talking about what happened.

I did talk a lot about what was going on, while my mother was dying and ever since. I'm a talkative person by nature. I only wrote to people who were long distance.

While she was dying, I found things to be very confusing and didn't know what to do. Fortunately my husband's sister is in the medical profession and works with stroke patients and brain-injured patients.

She was able to help me sort out how devastating my mom's stroke was, coupled with her existing medical conditons.

I found myself thinking - how do I know what to say when the doctor asks us what we want to do. I mean, how often in life is someone else's life in your hands. My sister-in-law had seen the situation I was facing before with other stroke patients and was able to help me make sense of what to do.
My mom had made her own wishes extremely clear. She had worked as a volunteer in a nursing home for 12 years and didn't want her life prolonged on machines if there was no hope. She wanted to live and had a very active life until that stroke. She had said when it was her time to go, to let her go.

I sat at her bedside and explained to her that the doctor said there was nothing that could be done to help her anymore. I felt I owed her that, but it was surreal to say those words to my precious mother.

I have told the story of what happened over and over. Sometimes it been talking to people who didn't know that my mother died and were now contacting me with their sympathy. It has also been with other friends who knew at the time and let me talk things over with them. My husband and my son have been great.

I have a friend who lost her mother 4 months before I lost mine. She and I have been able to share what we're going through in dealing with the hard times. I had several friends loose their own loved ones after me. Two friends lost both mother and father and in both cases the deaths were just months apart from each other. Another friend lost her new husband to cancer at 47. In all I've been touched by 10 deaths in the past 12 months. I've been talking with all of them about grieving.

So, I've been talking and talking. I do think it helps and it's also the way I was raised - to talk about my feelings. Writing about feelings is somewhat different for me, but I'm doing it when I share about what's going on by email and here on the forum. I think it helps me too. I try to encourage others with my experience and let them encourage me.

I've cried way more lately than I did at the time of her death. I think it was the shock at the time and now I'm facing the reality and loneliness more.

So, when you ask how have I worked this through, I would have to say it's an ongoing thing. I'm finding myself more tired than I would usually be and I'm trying to deal with that as well. I'm trying to remember it's never going to be done.

I hope this helps and please feel free to keep writing to me either on the forum or by p.m. I've been getting a lot from what you've been writing as well.

God Bless.
 
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UnitynLove

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Let me encourage you. If no one understands, Jesus does. Remeber the story of Lazarus and how Jesus wept over his lost friend. Jesus understands what your going through so ask for his healing and his peace. I know its very hard to overcome a death because you miss your loved ones so much, but please believe that you will be see them afterwhile. Just know that their purpose here was fulfilled and it was time for the Father to call them home again. I will pray for you. Heres an ezert from Joyce Myers:



I am told that the number one problem facing people today is grief and loneliness. People encounter major losses in their lives; and sadly, many never get over them. When tragedy occurs and the hurt seems unbearable, Satan sees it as an opportunity to attempt to bring a family or an individual into permanent bondage.

The death of a loved one, divorce, or the severing of a close relationship can bring grief; and most people go through a grieving process. The key to victory is to understand the difference between a normal, balanced "grieving process" and a spirit of grief that will try to attach itself to the hurting person. One helps the grieving person get better with the passing of time; the other causes him to get worse and sink deeper and deeper into the pit of despair.

I believe that one of the reasons why people, especially Christians, get into bondage during these trying times is due to a lack of understanding about the "grieving process." The term simply describes a succession of events that may occur in a person's life when something or someone that means a lot to them is suddenly no longer there.

Obviously, all people do not experience the same things in the same degrees; but we do have emotions that can be wounded and bruised and must be healed. Healing is a process—unless God gives a miracle, which He does at times—but more frequently, He walks His children through things step by step.

Shock and denial are two of the first things a person may encounter when tragedy occurs. Actually, God uses these to protect us from devastation. To illustrate, consider an automobile's shock absorbers. They are designed to cushion the vehicle from unexpected bumps in the road. Without them, it would fall apart from the violence of the blows it encounters during its travels.

People are often the same way. We are traveling on the road of life, and most of us are not expecting bumps and potholes. Therefore, we are not ready for them when they suddenly show up. Our Holy Ghost-installed "shock absorbers" cushion the blow until we can readjust and adapt our thinking to accommodate the sudden change in the ride. Shock and denial are good if they are temporary; however, they become a major problem if people permanently refuse to face reality and to learn how to deal with them.

The next thing people may (and often do) feel is anger—at themselves. They begin to think of things they wish they would or would not have done that might have made the situation better or prevented it. Satan wants us to live in regrets. Who is alive that would not say, "I wish I hadn't done that!" or "I wish I had done this"? Satan seeks to place blame; and it is intended to throw a person into a lifetime of guilt, condemnation, and self-hatred.

The apostle Paul stated in Philippians 3:13, ...one thing I do [it is my one aspiration]: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead. I like the phrase in the Amplified translation, "straining." This tells me that whenever I may have to "press on", there will be opposition from the enemy.

Endings always bring new beginnings. Satan strives to keep us out of the new place that God has prepared. He wants to trap us in the past and causes us to live in permanent misery. Self-anger and self-blame will accomplish the devil's purpose.

People may also experience anger at the person who left them—even if they died. My aunt told me that after my uncle died, she would sometimes beat his pillow at night and yell, "Why did you leave me?" Obviously, her intellect knew that he did not purposely leave her, but her emotions were speaking. We must realize that emotions have a voice; and when they are wounded, they may react like a wounded animal. Wounded animals can be quite dangerous, and so can wounded emotions be, if they are followed.

The grieving person needs to be taught about this grieving process and some of the things he may experience. He must also be taught to place little or no value on his feelings—and not to follow them. For a person who has experienced a major loss, it is not the time to be making serious decisions nor the time to deal with other issues that may be anxiety producing or emotionally upsetting.

Anger at God is quite common. People frequently ask, "If God is good, all powerful, and full of love for us, why didn't He stop the thing that caused the pain?" Satan seeks to build a wall between God and the hurting person. He seizes the opportunity to say, "God is not good, and He cannot be trusted." However, we know that it is a lie. Satan is a liar and the father of lies. The truth is not in him according to the Word of God.

Verses 12 and 13 of James 1 states, Blessed (happy, to be envied) is the man who is patient under trial and stands up under temptation, for when he has stood the test and been approved, he will receive [the victor's] crown of life which God has promised to those who love Him. Let no one say when he is tempted, I am tempted from God; for God is incapable of being tempted by [what is] evil and He Himself tempts no one.

And verse 17 says, Every good gift and every perfect (free, large, full) gift is from above; it comes down from the Father of all [that gives] light, in [the shining of] Whom there can be no variation [rising or setting] or shadow cast by His turning [as in an eclipse].

In other words, God is good; and He cannot be anything else. Furthermore, He is not one way one time and another way another time. He does not change. He is good, and that is the way He is. But what about the original question? Since God is good and all-powerful, why didn't He stop this thing before it brought all the hurt and pain?

To be very honest, these are questions for which we do not have completely sufficient answers.

I Corinthians 13:12 says, ...Now I know in part (imperfectly)... Trust always requires unanswered questions!

We want answers to everything, but we must come to the place where we are satisfied to know the One who knows and place our trust in Him. Being mad at God is foolish because He is the only One who can bring the needed help and comfort to the grieving or bereaved person.

Finally, people also get angry at the devil. This is normal and even good if the anger is properly expressed. The only way to repay the devil for hurt and devastation in our personal lives is to aggressively and vehemently do the works of Jesus. I receive much comfort and joy from Romans 12:21, ...overcome (master) evil with good.

People experiencing tragedy often go through stages of emotions expressed as sobbing and hysteria. These may come and go when least expected. Even people who are normally quite unemotional may experience a great deal of emotion during times of loss.

In general, people are afraid of emotions; and an uncontrolled display of these emotions is even more fearful. I encourage you to "fear not" because it will pass. Good understanding and a lot of help from the Holy Spirit will bring you through this kind of situation.

Confusion, disorientation, and fear are common. Depression and waves of overwhelming feelings are experienced by many, as well as, physical symptoms caused by the emotional stress, with which the wounded person is dealing. I believe the key word in these situations is balance.

The Bible talks of how King David was feeling depressed, but he resisted it. He did not sink into it, nor get into the pit of despair. He described how he felt, but he made a decision not to live by his feelings (read Psalm 42:5-11 and Psalm 143). People have often confided to me their discouragement from being made to feel (by others) that they had insufficient faith when they go through experiences like this.

I believe it often takes more faith to go through something victoriously than to be delivered from it. There are some that experience complete deliverance from grief after a great loss, but that does not happen to all people. There are others, and I might even say most of us, who go through very emotionally difficult times when tragic loss occurs. Those who are walking in faith come out of it, and they come out of it better than when they went in.

In closing, let me say, "Do not lose your hope!" If you are hurting right now due to a loss in your life, I want to say to you that a new beginning is in front of you. You may go through some things that you will never understand, but you can trust God to work them out for your good. What Satan intends for your harm, God can turn around for your good!
 
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azzy

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christdefinesme said:
I am a grown woman with 4 kids and have been a Christain for many years, feel quite mature and solid in Christ, and yet, the loss of my parents makes me feel like a child. 2 1/2 years ago, my stepdad passed, a very unexpected and ugly death (brain stem stroke), and 9 months later, during my pregnancy with my 4th child, my mother passed away after 1 1/2 years of liver disease, after months of hospital stays, traumatic "scares" and recoveries, all during my pregnancy; another ugly, torturous death to watch. Back when I was 4 1/2 my biological father died from a brain bleed when he was hit on the head with a beer bottle, someone was trying to start a fight.
So, I feel very solid in Christ, He has definitely kept me centered. It just hurts, in a very strange, deep, achey way, and i feel like none of my friends understand, or even really want to listen to me process this stuff. I have great, committed, wonderful, true friends, I just know they don't really understand, they can't relate. They can't relate to how deep the trauma of death goes, they can't relate to the fact that I just can't get over the ugliness of death, the ugliness of watching someone completely lose who they are, the ugliness of watching your parents' bodies dependent on machines, tubes everywhere with all sorts of disgusting fluids coming out, going in, etc. The ugliness of things left unresolved. Not necessarily on my end, but on theirs. I know my mom and stepdad are with the Lord, but it doesn't take away the ugliness of what I've experienced. And I have not had anyone to talk to about it. Can anyone relate?
I Thank God Almighty for His Holy Spirit which has guarded and sustained me.
Amen.:crosseo:

Bless you heart,I can,Nobody understands me either,but I feel like the Lord does,people tell me Im not saved,and they dont know the trouble I have seen,and the many times God delivered me.

My dad Died too,and didnt like me even though he was saved,he died saying some ugly things to me,and I can not do anything about it,because he is gone.I didnt go to his funeral.

Well,You can be sure that no one knows you like the Lord does,and no one can love you like him,because we are limmited in our love and abilities,but God is not limmited,his love is higher than the stars,and deeper than the seas,the fires can not quench it,and the floods can not drown it,Love is forever,because God is love.

Im glad to hear you already know this,you are truly blessed.
 

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Christdefinesme

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Thanks to all of you, again, for your thoughts and encouragement.
I have been doing pretty well lately, honestly, it really helps to have a place
to get this stuff out, and I used to journal A LOT, but it's been hard to do
the last couple of years, that used to help me process stuff the Lord was bringing me through. Well, I started blogging here on CF, and between that and being able to post and process life alongside you all, it has helped tremendously. I know this is a process, and for me, the grief comes in waves, it is deeper at times, and not so deep at other times. Thanks be to God that it's like that. I have a lot going on in life, I don't have time to be "down" all the time. Thanks to all of you for sharing, I would love to read more if anyone wants to share here, it is really a blessing to read your stories, and I think it's important for brothers and sisters in Christ to share and be vulnerable in this way. Take care, all.
:groupray:
 
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SharonL

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I posted this in another thread, but feel you might find some peace in it. I received a request from a precious person that lost her husband and she ask if I had a poem for losing a loved one. My way of praying is asking God if He has a word for them and this beautiful poem came forth. I pray it will bring you the Peace that Passes all understanding.

SHARE IN THE GLORY OF A LOVED ONE

This loved one you cherish may now be out of your physical sight.
Keep this precious soul always in your mind and always praise their spirited fight.


Never think for a moment their faith was in
vain.
My arms were wrapped around them and helped them endure the pain.


While you enjoyed this wonderful laughter and caring heart,
Remember my precious ones, they are still living in laughter, only now they no longer have to dodge the enemy's darts.


You feel as if you have lost even part of
yourself.
Be at peace and know your loved one is enjoying Heavens Beautiful Wealth.


Be happy for this precious one who has won the race.
Picture them in Heaven, basking in God's Glory upon their face.


Never look upon this passing with sadness of this precious one.
The Blessings are overwhelming as they walk hand in hand with My Son.


Keep your hearts and souls pure and without blemish.
Build up high your crowns which will be waiting for you when your walk here is finished.


Gather around you all those lives this precious soul has touched.
Help them to look to Heaven and know their Precious Savior loves them 'Oh so very much.'


Jesus' arms are wrapped around you and encompasses you all.
His call to you is 'hold up those remaining and never let them fall.'


As your thoughts flow in remembrance of this precious one.
Delight in the Glory that is the prize for the battle won.


~~Sharon Lambkin~~

We cannot feel your pain, but we can lift you up to the throne for that precious touch from the Masters Hand.
 
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halfaman

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I TOTALLY UNDERSTAND YOU!!! there are never the right words...most people can't relate becuase they have not been there...I lost my wife Oct 15th 2005...I did CPR on her while waiting for the medics...the fluids that came out the ugliness of it all....I totally understand how you feel....I am coping with it the best I can...I don't even know how I feel half the time...I hope you can find some peace with this....and if you do let me know! God Bless and may peace fill your thoughts:prayer:
halfaman
 
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Hisbygrace

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Yes dear Sister I can understand. I have lost mother, father, brother and husband.
Time has healed some of the pain and God has done as He promised He has sustained me and supported me. yet there are still times when I miss them very, very much. There are times when I wish so bad that I had them to talk too. My father has been gone since 1977, my mother died in 1986, my brother was killed in 1995 and my husband died from emphzemia in 2002. There are still many days when I cry for them and times that I don't think I can go on, but that's when God wraps His peace around me and tells my heart I will see them again one day. I am praying that God will give you peace over the ugliness of their illnesses and bring you to the point where they are just a memory behind you...May God bless you, Janice
 
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BLUEEYEANGEL

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SWEETIE , WHEN YOU FELL YOU WANT TO TALK , PLEASE PM ME.

GIRL I LOVE YOU AND DONT WANT TO SEE YOU HURT.:hug:

christdefinesme said:
I am a grown woman with 4 kids and have been a Christain for many years, feel quite mature and solid in Christ, and yet, the loss of my parents makes me feel like a child. 2 1/2 years ago, my stepdad passed, a very unexpected and ugly death (brain stem stroke), and 9 months later, during my pregnancy with my 4th child, my mother passed away after 1 1/2 years of liver disease, after months of hospital stays, traumatic "scares" and recoveries, all during my pregnancy; another ugly, torturous death to watch. Back when I was 4 1/2 my biological father died from a brain bleed when he was hit on the head with a beer bottle, someone was trying to start a fight.
So, I feel very solid in Christ, He has definitely kept me centered. It just hurts, in a very strange, deep, achey way, and i feel like none of my friends understand, or even really want to listen to me process this stuff. I have great, committed, wonderful, true friends, I just know they don't really understand, they can't relate. They can't relate to how deep the trauma of death goes, they can't relate to the fact that I just can't get over the ugliness of death, the ugliness of watching someone completely lose who they are, the ugliness of watching your parents' bodies dependent on machines, tubes everywhere with all sorts of disgusting fluids coming out, going in, etc. The ugliness of things left unresolved. Not necessarily on my end, but on theirs. I know my mom and stepdad are with the Lord, but it doesn't take away the ugliness of what I've experienced. And I have not had anyone to talk to about it. Can anyone relate?
I Thank God Almighty for His Holy Spirit which has guarded and sustained me.
Amen.:crosseo:
 
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