Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 Hi - Do you live in Canada? Did your mom pass away around the time of my dad, which is coming up on 4 years this September? I think we used to correspond through online conversations and email back and forth. Just recently Donna R. mentioned how she thought there were 4 or 5 of us who lost our parents around the same time. I mentioned there was a lady named from Canada that lost her mom, plus a lady, , in California lost her dad 2 days before my dad, then my dad and Donna R.'s mom and Sally in England lost her dad, both in October. Does any of this make sense? If so, I sure have missed seeing you in here and have wondered how you are doing. Take care- Sandie Des Moines, IA -- re:Hallucinations Hello, My mother passed away a few years ago and this was when I joined the group. I still read the posts and can relate to many things that are of concern to others. I read with interest, the topic on hallucinations, of which my mother had many. When I reflect back on the most frequent hallucinations that she had, they centered on the things that she had feared the most during her lifetime. She was always fearful that someone would do harm to her or her family, and her hallucinations included a neighbour who she thought had her home " bugged " and knew everything that went on in her home. Having been raised in a European household, she felt that what happened in the family was not to be told to others. She feared that someone was coming after us all with guns. While in the hospital, she would close the door, move the hospital beds and his in the corner in fear of the shooter.She feared that her house had been ravaged and things stolen and that someone had set fire to her home. She also claimed that a young male had phoned her and told her that he was an illegitimate child of my fathers. Perhaps these hallucinations were to do with her fantasies. She became " engaged " to Larry, a person that we never knew and that she was sporting a huge diamond. She had many conversations with him while we were driving in the car. Things just didn't always seem to make much sense. It really disturbed us when we found out that she was making cakes, pies and cookies, and leaving them in the flower garden besidethe neighbours house for the supposed man that she feared. While reading the posts on this site, I was reminded that what I would do when she seemed to get out of reality, was switch to topic to one that she had always loved all her life: cooking or gardening. That often was all that was needed. It is not an easy time, and I still cry for the woman that was stolen from me and my family. I wish that we could have done more for her. But, she lives withing my heart as a much loved parent. __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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