Adult Orphans
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By Michelle Mason, Journalist






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    Adults who loose their parents are known as adult orphans. Today there are increasing numbers of support websites aimed at adult orphans who feel the loss acutely, finding themselves ‘alone’ in this world. No matter the kind of relationship one has with their parents, It is comforting knowing that there is an older, if not wiser person who has a love for us that is unconditional. Even if that relationship is inconsistent there is a certain type of solace derived from even the mere existence of parent/s. So what becomes of the adult orphan? Suddenly they are alone, without the comfort of parental existence.

     

    Thursday February 15 2007 marked a bittersweet day for me. I arrived back to Perth, Australia from London, with my partner, excited at the prospect of summer, ocean, friends and family. However, the reason for my return home: my mother’s unexpected hospitalisation. Only 49 years old, she died 16 hours after I arrived home. The death of a parent can vary in extremity, but the death of a youthful parent with so much yet to live for and for no particular reason leaves a confused angry adult orphan.

     

    My mum had an acute asthma attack, her throat closed up, she was given an emergency tracheotomy and adrenalin but she was still without oxygen for 40 minutes – she was at her boyfriend’s 50th birthday in Yanchep, about an hour from Perth city.

    “Oxygen deprivation lasting longer than five to ten minutes can be fatal. Almost all persons surviving five minutes or more of complete oxygen depravation sustain permanent brain damage”

    (BrainInjury.com, J.N. Walton, 1994).

    Being without oxygen for 40 minutes meant that mum did not have severe brain damage, she was brain dead. CAT scans revealed no brain activity; she would not be waking up, ever.

     

    Seeing your loved one with a tube down their throat forcing them to breath, their tongue pale, their mouth slack and their eyes closed, lashes covered with clear balm to maintain eye moisture, is the single most painful experience I have ever encountered. When my partner and I walked into her hospital room we collapsed into tears, shocked at the sight of my vibrant mother reduced to a saggy puddle, covered with tubes, stiches and bruises. Someone had plaited her greying hair – I left for London months before and she had not found a replacement colourist – which seemed ludicrous. My mum smoked like a chimney, drank like a fish and rode an enormous blue motorbike. She was not a plait kind of woman. Suffice to say, I removed the plait immediately, brushing her hair down around her face like she used to wear it.

     

    There were many tears, hugs and words of comfort to be had between my family, her friends and her boyfriend over the course of that Thursday. My partner and I spent much of the day by her side, saying goodbye, having accepted the inevitable that no one else really had. My brothers were still hoping and praying she would wake up. I’d been steeling myself for her death already, in London, when I heard that she’d been without oxygen for 40 minutes.

     

    At 10.55pm Thursday 15 February 2007 my mum slipped away, her blood pressure had been dropping steadily for the past few hours. Everyone said it was as though she had been waiting for me to arrive home before letting go. She was not alone when she passed, her boyfriend held one hand, her close friend the other. She had another friend stroking her hair and more sitting at the edge of her bed. I am thankful for that. My partner and I arrived at 11.15pm to find her room full of close friends, drinking a champagne toast to my mum and listening to Santana. I held her hand, stroked her hair and drank straight from the communal champagne bottle.

     

    By midnight the friends had slowly drifted home and I asked for my partner to take a friend home so I could have some time alone with mum. I crawled onto her hospital bed and nestled myself on her belly like I used to as a child. I lay there crying and talking to her, eventually exhausting myself and falling asleep. My partner woke me at 2am, we said our final goodbyes and left the hospital. I cherish that time I had to say goodbye to mum, falling asleep on her tummy like I have done a thousand times gave me a certain peace.

     

    What you don’t see in the movies or read in books when someone dies is their colourless lips, icy skin, their body so slack and heavy and their mouth hanging open revealing a pale lifeless tongue. I kept trying to close my mum’s mouth; she would have hated the indecency of her appearance. By 2am her jaw was stiff and she didn’t smell like mum anymore.

     

    “When someone's heart stops pumping blood around their body, the tissues and cells are deprived of oxygen and rapidly begin to die. The intestines are packed with millions of micro-organisms that don't die with the person. These organisms start to break down the dead cells of the intestines, while some, especially bacteria called clostridia and coliforms, start to invade other parts of the body.  At the same time the body undergoes its own intrinsic breakdown under the action of enzymes and other chemicals which have been released by the dead cells. The decomposing tissues release green substances and gas which…and also gives off a terrible smell as gases such as hydrogen sulphide (rotten egg smell), methane and traces of mercaptans are released.”

    (Dr Trisha Macnair, BBC Health)

     



    Continued On Next Page (Adult Orphans, Page 2) ...


    AUTHOR: Michelle Mason

    TAGS: Life                  

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    anon.




    anon. says on 2008-10-22 18:57:59 about
    I'm sorry for your loss, I lost my dad in02 mom in 2003, and am 1 of five with a terminally sick oldest sibling. And i work at a cemetery.






    trish13




    trish13 says on 2008-10-09 00:19:05 about adult orphans
    Today i buried my mother who was terminally ill. I lost my father 13 years ago. I know I have this dreadful aloneness. I have 2 sibs, 1 children and a lot of other family. But--There is something so gut wrenching when you lose those 2 people who loved you from the moment they saw you. I'm glad to have a term for it "adult orphan." I think this will help in my healing process. thanks for sharing your story.






    AllAlone




    AllAlone says on 2008-05-02 14:44:48 about Family death
    I can totallyconnect with the author of his personal experience. I have lost both of my parents and both of my siblings, leaving me an adult orphan. I have no one to share memories with, no one to share my christmas or thanksgiving table with, no birthdays to celebrate. How does one cope without anyone at all?






    Panda




    Panda says on 2008-03-01 15:05:59 about
    I just finished reading this article and it pleases me to see someone so honest about the death of their parent. So many people try to cover it up and lessen the struggle, I feel that doing so sometimes makes the bereaved feel ashamed of their feelings. I lost my father in September of this year. Like Michelle's mother, my father was much too young to have passed. I am grateful for her honesty and courage. My father's deceased body was the most horrific thing I had ever seen and too few people seem to grasp the situation because they try to sugar coat it with cliches.






    Panda




    Panda says on 2008-03-01 15:05:52 about
    I just finished reading this article and it pleases me to see someone so honest about the death of their parent. So many people try to cover it up and lessen the struggle, I feel that doing so sometimes makes the bereaved feel ashamed of their feelings. I lost my father in September of this year. Like Michelle's mother, my father was much too young to have passed. I am grateful for her honesty and courage. My father's deceased body was the most horrific thing I had ever seen and too few people seem to grasp the situation because they try to sugar coat it with cliches.






    Panda




    Panda says on 2008-03-01 15:05:06 about
    I just finished reading this article and it pleases me to see someone so honest about the death of their parent. So many people try to cover it up and lessen the struggle, I feel that doing so sometimes makes the bereaved feel ashamed of their feelings. I lost my father in September of this year. Like Michelle's mother, my father was much too young to have passed. I am grateful for her honesty and courage. My father's deceased body was the most horrific thing I had ever seen and too few people seem to grasp the situation because they try to sugar coat it with cliches.






    kbear




    kbear says on 2008-01-25 05:43:38 about adult orphans
    I just read michelles touching tribute to her mum, i was looking up Adult Orphans, as a friend who has just lost both her parents had recommended I do so. She is the first in our 'set' of friends to have lost her parents and i think she feels very lost and misunderstood, she is a vibrant, outspoken and strong person and yet it took her legs from under her when they died - I think i have gained a greater understanding of just how lost she feels at time from reading these articles and I am very glad that they are of such comfort to people like her who can't always open up about how they feel but are never the less in torment many months or years after their parents death.






    kbear




    kbear says on 2008-01-25 05:42:21 about adult orphans
    I just read micheles touching tribute to her mum, i was looking up Adult Orphans, as a friend who has just lost both her parents had recommended I do so. She is the first in our 'set' of friends to have lost her parents and i think she feels very lost and misunderstood, she is a vibrant, outspoken and strong person and yet it took her legs from under her when they died - I think i have gained a greater understanding of just how lost she feels at time from reading these articles and I am very glad that they are of such comfort to people like her who can't always open up about how they feel but are never the less in torment many months or years after their parents death.









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