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Story That Starts With Husband’s Weird And False Belief That Wife Is Pregnant Ends With His Death
Woman lying on couch, looking pensive and worried, illustrating cancer diagnosis and pregnancy assumptions.
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Story That Starts With Husband’s Weird And False Belief That Wife Is Pregnant Ends With His Death

Interview With Expert

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When getting married, the husband and wife promise to love each other “in sickness and in health”. Unfortunately, none of us know when the time of sickness may come, and sometimes, it comes in the most confusing, unexpected ways.

For this couple, everything started when the husband began falsely insisting that his wife was pregnant. Rattled by his strange behavior, she didn’t know what to make of it. As the mystery knots in this story untangled, it became clear that a more sinister health condition was behind his erratic behavior. And it all led to an inevitable but heartbreaking conclusion.

We reached out to a certified loss and empowerment coach, Amanda McKoy Flanagan, LMSW. She is also a writing coach, energy healer, and motivational speaker, the author of the award-winning inspirational memoir Trust Yourself to Be All In: Safe to Love and Let Go, and host of the Sol Rising podcast.

She kindly agreed to tell Bored Panda more about anticipatory grief, whether anger is a natural part of grieving, and why it’s best to feel and ‘make friends’ with that anger during the grieving process.

More info: Amanda McKoy Flanagan | Facebook | Instagram

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    A husband started insisting his wife was pregnant out of nowhere

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    At first, she didn’t think much of it, but she grew more and more uncomfortable as he wouldn’t stop

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    Image credits: blackNull (not the actual photo)

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    Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)

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    Image credits: hrowRA_LosingMind

    People were speculating whether the husband was just manipulating her or if something more serious was going on

    A few days later, the couple got into a huge fight and ended up staying with their parents

    Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: ThrowRA_LosingMind

    Commenters were glad both of them were safe, but urged the woman to convince her husband to get checked out by a medical professional

    Finally, the family convinced the husband to see a doctor

    Then the real reason for his strange behavior was revealed: a brain tumor

    Image credits: EyeEm (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: ThrowRA_LosingMind

    Commenters met the update with an outpouring of support: “Sending internet hugs”

    The wife also clarified the exact diagnosis

    After the news, the wife shared how heartbroken she was for their robbed future together

    Image credits freepik (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: hrowRA_LosingMind

    Six weeks after her original post, the wife revealed that her husband’s condition was critical

    Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)

    The wife was experiencing what’s called ‘anticipatory grief’

    The news about the woman’s husband’s brain tumor came out of nowhere. What began as a story of confusion and possible manipulation soon turned into a heartbreaking one. The author bravely documented her journey in posts across different subreddits, and after the initial shock of the diagnosis.

    As some of the commenters already explained, what she was experiencing was anticipatory grief. Instead of regular grief, this type of bereavement is about what’s yet to come. Grief coach Amanda McKoy Flanagan tells Bored Panda that anticipatory grief can surface in lots of ways.

    “Most of us are living with some form of it, whether we are aware of its manifestation or not and whether the threat of loss is real or perceived,” she notes. McKoy Flanagan says the following are four of the most common situations in which we may experience it:

    • When a physical death is imminent;
    • When fear of future loss exists without a medical determination;
    • When a significant change might be coming to a relationship with a living person (e.g., divorce);
    • Or when our hopes for a relationship with a parent, child, spouse, or friend get squashed.

    “Any major change on the horizon creates anticipatory grief and may present similarly to bereavement,” the grief coach points out.

    “Emotions such as anxiety, confusion, frustration, irritability, depression, disorientation, absent-mindedness, despair, and anger are typical with this kind of grief, and are often heightened if one has suffered a previous traumatic loss as fresh loss inevitably kicks up old grief.”

    Image credits: ThrowRA_LosingMind

    “This woman is not angry at her husband for being ill, she is afraid he is going to die,” loss and empowerment coach says

    The wife in the story details how angry she felt at her husband for getting sick and leaving her alone. McKoy Flanagan says that anger is a very natural part of grief. “I say ‘part,’ not ‘stage,’ because contrary to popular belief, there are no stages of grief,” she also notes.

    The classic five stages of griefdenial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptancewere established by Elizabeth Kübler-Ross. But McKoy Flanagan points out that she was referring to preparing for your own death, not someone else’s.

    Still, anger is an emotion a lot of grieving people feel. McKoy Flanagan tells us that it’s also uncontrollable: “It may come and go at will.” Yet she emphasizes fear as the emotion we should be paying attention to.

    “Anger is a symptom of fear,” she explains. “If you are angry, the pressing question you should ask yourself is, ‘What am I afraid of?’ This woman is not angry at her husband for being ill, she is afraid he is going to die. We succumb to anger because it is easier to default to than fear.”

    “It provides protection, a righteous ego-boost, whereas fear makes us vulnerable, another frightening emotional state to be in: fear on top of fear. Anger also makes us feel in control when we feel helpless. Anger makes us feel safe,” the grief coach explains.

    Commenters stood by the woman, sharing similar stories about grief and loss

    About a month later, the woman shared the news of her husband’s passing

    Image credits: pressmaster ( not the actual photo)

    Text on a plain white background reading He passed on the 16th. We had his funeral shortly after, relating to a heartbreaking cancer diagnosis.

    Image credits: ThrowRA_LosingMind

    Women often suppress anger, but the grief coach says to “Just let it be. Feel it.”

    The wife in this story also admits she feels shame about being angry. McKoy Flanagan says that it might be because women are often conditioned to suppress anger since “Good girls don’t get angry.”

    Women are sweet, kind, and accommodating,” she says. “In a man’s world, an angry woman is a form of rebellion, a message of resistance, a challenge to the current structures.”

    “This prevailing ideology that has kept girls and women suppressed and voiceless bleeds into the grief space, and shame is the tool used to keep us in check, to keep us calm, quiet, and compliant.”

    The grief coach notes how, for many women, being angry is off-limits. “If we expressed anger as children, our feelings were often invalidated, and shame is a close cousin to invalidation. As a result of this conditioning, our internal policewomen heap shame on ourselves for feeling this very natural emotion, and we keep this secret to ourselves, compounding our shame.”

    There’s also a strong message in society to “Never speak ill of the [passed].” Even if we’re angry at a loved one who has passed or is about to pass, we’re not allowed to express the anger and frustration we may feel towards them.

    “Some of us have bridged a faulty connection between feeling angry about a death to being angry with a person for dying,” McKoy Flanagan says. “You can feel angry about your loss without blaming someone for the situation.”

    “In fact, it’s healthy to feel anger without seeking a place to put it. Just let it be. Feel it. Make friends with your anger without shame or judgment. Then let it go.”

    Four months after that, she came back to share how she’s coping with the loss of her husband

    Image credits: senivpetro (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: ThrowRA_LosingMind

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    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    Hi there, fellow pandas! As a person (over)educated both in social sciences and literature, I'm most interested in how we connect and behave online (and sometimes in real life too.) The human experience is weird, so I try my best to put its peculiarities in writing. As a person who grew up chronically online, I now try to marry two sides of myself: the one who knows too much about MySpace, and the one who can't settle and needs to see every corner of the world.

    Read less »
    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Hi there, fellow pandas! As a person (over)educated both in social sciences and literature, I'm most interested in how we connect and behave online (and sometimes in real life too.) The human experience is weird, so I try my best to put its peculiarities in writing. As a person who grew up chronically online, I now try to marry two sides of myself: the one who knows too much about MySpace, and the one who can't settle and needs to see every corner of the world.

    Shelly Fourer

    Shelly Fourer

    Author, Community member

    Read more »

    Hey there! I'm Shelly, a Visual Editor at Bored Panda

    Read less »

    Shelly Fourer

    Shelly Fourer

    Author, Community member

    Hey there! I'm Shelly, a Visual Editor at Bored Panda

    What do you think ?
    Mel in Georgia
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What a tragic story. It's a reminder that when a loved one suddenly starts exhibiting behavior that's just not "them" to try to figure out why it's happening. There's often a medical or psychological reason for it. Hope the best for the OP. :(

    Amelia Jade
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It has been a long while since a story on here made me tear up. This is incredibly sad.

    Binky Melnik
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    By the time we got to the end, I, too, was extremely angry, as I’d assumed it’d be removed and all would be well. 😞 To have the last month(s?) of your beloved’s life taken over by an angry and confusing stranger and not getting to be with the one you love strikes me as such an evil thing for the Fates to do! I always roll my eyes when someone says that something isn’t “fair” (because fairness hasn’t anything to do with most of the things they’ré talking about), and here I’m thinking this was entirely UNFAIR. I’m also thinking I much, MUCH prefer anger over the agony of loss and sadness. I was devastated when I lost by beloved of 15 years but looked for ways to get angry instead (like concentrating on his grumpiness, misanthropy, and so on), and it actually worked to a degree. I was more or less “over” the loss in about 15 months, and know it woulda been *at least* twice as long had I not focused on anger. I feel so incredibly bad for OP; whatta wretched nightmare. 😞😞😞

    Load More Replies...
    Kim Kermes
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm so very sorry. Please know your anger is totally normal and you are not a batch. When my dad died, my mom had a picture of him enlarged to life size, put it in his recliner, and chewed him out for leaving him. I'm glad she did. It got her over the hump.

    Leah Woodard
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have been seriously ill my entire adult life, being confronted by my mortality many, many times. Imagine my surprise when, one day, my amazing husband had an aneurysm and died in front of our daughter and I. I have lived with her for the 5 years since, continuiing to have periodic, life-threatening episodes; my daughter is FREQUENTLY angry at me. Forgive yourself for that. Speaking as the afflicted, all it does is tell me how afraid and how much pain she's in; all it does is tell me how deeply she loves me. The greatest thing she can do for him is remember him...and heal.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Leah, I am so deeply sympathetically sorry for what you have gone through - both with your own health and your husband's death. I wish I could give you a big hug and talk to your child - as daughter of a deceased father to daughter of a deceased father - and try to tell her what I learned over my own (horrifically protracted) grief process (protracted because I "lost" my father the day of his accident - catastrophic brain damage - but he lived for another 21 years with me as his caregiver.) I would often get SUPER angry "at" him. I'd scream in my head "Why did you go up that ladder in your FLIP-FLOPS, you ÁSSHOLE?" (I'm still frustrated about that and it was 25 years ago!) I'm sure you know, but your daughter absolutely isn't angry "at" you insofar as "you are a horrible mother" but because she's terrified, and probably still going through the phases of grief re: her dad's death and also struggling with "anticipatory grief" re: your health. So much love to you both <3

    Load More Replies...
    Jemima Bauer
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A friend died of the same thing not too long ago - it happened very quickly after diagnosis. Apparently that’s one of the more difficult cancers to treat. 😔

    Cronecast AtTheRisingMoon
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh, that poor woman. Anger is a stage in grief, it’s often the thing that proceeds sadness. That poor man! A tumor turned him into a stranger to himself, it’s all heartbreaking.

    *raspberry sound
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oof! This one has me crying at my desk. Heartbreaking.

    Birb
    Community Member
    9 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My dad died last saturday 24 may. Monday 2 june is his funeral. And i really miss him. We, me, my 2 sisters, 2 BILS, nephew and niece are now cleaning the house and remove everything i grew up in and thats a very hard thing to do.FWI, my mom died 19 june 2022.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ::hugs:: I'm sorry for your loss, Birb. I hope you're doing as well as you can be :( I lost my dad on May 9th, 2021. I'm not even allowed to talk about his death with family/friends (long story.) I hope you and your sisters can find some healing and peace by remembering the good times as you clean out the house. Save whatever mementoes/memories/items you feel that you want to - it will help so much. <3

    Load More Replies...
    Motivated sloth
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What a horrifying story, wish I hadn’t started my day with this. I’ve never read a story on this site that made me cry. What a cruel twist she was dealt. I was so happy to read the part about the dog though. They really can be the best therapy.

    Scott Rackley
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Same thing killed my dad's best friend, basically my bonus uncle. From symptoms to diagnosis, 2 months. From diagnosis to passing, 32 days. It didn't change his personality but close to the end he was blind. That was 30 years ago, miss you Marshall.

    Broad Panda
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This hit so close to home. My husband died 4 weeks after being diagnosed with cancer. Grief mixed with confusion and anger and exhaustion. The anger that the life we planned would never happen was so huge.

    Shelley Colleen
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I just lost a friend to glioblastoma. Absolutely evil affliction that literally no one survives. My friend's only symptoms were extreme fatigue and brain fog but, by the time they sought medical care, they were estimated only 3-4 weeks of time left. Brilliant human, did everything right. I can only imagine adding painfully irrational behavior on top of that trauma.

    Lee Panther
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My partner has the same thing but they managed to remove most of it. It will come back Radio hit him hard and he's not been well enough to continue chemo for nearly 6 months now. It is so very VERY hard.

    Dori
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My MIL died of brain cancer. She'd had cancer for years, metastasized all over. Once it got to her brain she refused to treat. I think she was tired of treating. I believe her death helped to end our marriage: my ex was very close with his mon and honestly so was I. It's a pain that never heals.

    Meaghan Stewart
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is so tragic. But yeah from the start all I could think of was when my ex-husband suddenly started to act strangely. Irrationally jealous, angry, yelling with spittle flying like he’d never done before… his personality had completely changed. I tried so hard to understand and make it work but I had to step back for my own safety, because he refused to go to a therapist or a doctor or the hospital even when he started having little seizures he insisted were stress/panic attacks (from my behaviour, of course). Then I learned from his family he’d had a huge seizure and was unresponsive and had been taken to the hospital where they finally took an MRI and discovered his brain was bleeding (likely from an old football injury in HS). He had surgery and within weeks he was back to his old self. It’s amazing how much something like that can change someone. Clearly we still had our differences and divorced years later but for another reason entirely.

    Crystalwitch60
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Op please don’t feel sorry for feeling angry x it is perfectly normal to feel this and something anyone grieving has to go thru , as witchy lady said 7 stages of grief and they take time , as much time as you need ! Never let anyone tell you to move on etc that is a you thing totally , grief is highly personal , and different for all ,the one thing that will help you when the anger overwhelms you lovely is to go for a log. Walk out in the country side find a quiet spot and scream and shout at the sky at the world and him u till you can’t anymore it’s called primal screaming and it really really helps those feelings you just can’t process , I’ve no idea if you will see these as this is on be but we are all still here for you , blessed be to you and your furbaby , n I’m so very sorry for your loss 💔

    ROSESARERED
    Community Member
    7 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My sister had a brain tumour, thankfully not cancerous, removed 20 years ago this month. Was so stressful. Thankfully we still have her, and she is still the person we know. Two surgeons, 9½hours of surgery..she could have had a stoke, brain dead, total personality change, lose her speech, sight, hearing, taste, smell. Losing her would have broken our world apart. She only lost her ability to smell, she is still her. My heart breaks for this woman...some of her steps I walked. It is hard, so hard, as any life threatening illness is. God bless. Love those you love with all you can, life can be too short

    weatherwitch
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It was very apparent that something was medically wrong, my presumption had been a form of psychosis. This poor poor lady, I hoped for a better outcome but it was not to be. The dog enabled her to reconnect, make a little way of the darkness of grief because she had to take care of it. You Have to face the world with a dog, see nature, feel the sun on your face and the wind in your hair... And these micro moments are comforting, healing as is the love of a dog. Poor woman 😔

    Mel in Georgia
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What a tragic story. It's a reminder that when a loved one suddenly starts exhibiting behavior that's just not "them" to try to figure out why it's happening. There's often a medical or psychological reason for it. Hope the best for the OP. :(

    Amelia Jade
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It has been a long while since a story on here made me tear up. This is incredibly sad.

    Binky Melnik
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    By the time we got to the end, I, too, was extremely angry, as I’d assumed it’d be removed and all would be well. 😞 To have the last month(s?) of your beloved’s life taken over by an angry and confusing stranger and not getting to be with the one you love strikes me as such an evil thing for the Fates to do! I always roll my eyes when someone says that something isn’t “fair” (because fairness hasn’t anything to do with most of the things they’ré talking about), and here I’m thinking this was entirely UNFAIR. I’m also thinking I much, MUCH prefer anger over the agony of loss and sadness. I was devastated when I lost by beloved of 15 years but looked for ways to get angry instead (like concentrating on his grumpiness, misanthropy, and so on), and it actually worked to a degree. I was more or less “over” the loss in about 15 months, and know it woulda been *at least* twice as long had I not focused on anger. I feel so incredibly bad for OP; whatta wretched nightmare. 😞😞😞

    Load More Replies...
    Kim Kermes
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm so very sorry. Please know your anger is totally normal and you are not a batch. When my dad died, my mom had a picture of him enlarged to life size, put it in his recliner, and chewed him out for leaving him. I'm glad she did. It got her over the hump.

    Leah Woodard
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have been seriously ill my entire adult life, being confronted by my mortality many, many times. Imagine my surprise when, one day, my amazing husband had an aneurysm and died in front of our daughter and I. I have lived with her for the 5 years since, continuiing to have periodic, life-threatening episodes; my daughter is FREQUENTLY angry at me. Forgive yourself for that. Speaking as the afflicted, all it does is tell me how afraid and how much pain she's in; all it does is tell me how deeply she loves me. The greatest thing she can do for him is remember him...and heal.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Leah, I am so deeply sympathetically sorry for what you have gone through - both with your own health and your husband's death. I wish I could give you a big hug and talk to your child - as daughter of a deceased father to daughter of a deceased father - and try to tell her what I learned over my own (horrifically protracted) grief process (protracted because I "lost" my father the day of his accident - catastrophic brain damage - but he lived for another 21 years with me as his caregiver.) I would often get SUPER angry "at" him. I'd scream in my head "Why did you go up that ladder in your FLIP-FLOPS, you ÁSSHOLE?" (I'm still frustrated about that and it was 25 years ago!) I'm sure you know, but your daughter absolutely isn't angry "at" you insofar as "you are a horrible mother" but because she's terrified, and probably still going through the phases of grief re: her dad's death and also struggling with "anticipatory grief" re: your health. So much love to you both <3

    Load More Replies...
    Jemima Bauer
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A friend died of the same thing not too long ago - it happened very quickly after diagnosis. Apparently that’s one of the more difficult cancers to treat. 😔

    Cronecast AtTheRisingMoon
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh, that poor woman. Anger is a stage in grief, it’s often the thing that proceeds sadness. That poor man! A tumor turned him into a stranger to himself, it’s all heartbreaking.

    *raspberry sound
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oof! This one has me crying at my desk. Heartbreaking.

    Birb
    Community Member
    9 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My dad died last saturday 24 may. Monday 2 june is his funeral. And i really miss him. We, me, my 2 sisters, 2 BILS, nephew and niece are now cleaning the house and remove everything i grew up in and thats a very hard thing to do.FWI, my mom died 19 june 2022.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ::hugs:: I'm sorry for your loss, Birb. I hope you're doing as well as you can be :( I lost my dad on May 9th, 2021. I'm not even allowed to talk about his death with family/friends (long story.) I hope you and your sisters can find some healing and peace by remembering the good times as you clean out the house. Save whatever mementoes/memories/items you feel that you want to - it will help so much. <3

    Load More Replies...
    Motivated sloth
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What a horrifying story, wish I hadn’t started my day with this. I’ve never read a story on this site that made me cry. What a cruel twist she was dealt. I was so happy to read the part about the dog though. They really can be the best therapy.

    Scott Rackley
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Same thing killed my dad's best friend, basically my bonus uncle. From symptoms to diagnosis, 2 months. From diagnosis to passing, 32 days. It didn't change his personality but close to the end he was blind. That was 30 years ago, miss you Marshall.

    Broad Panda
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This hit so close to home. My husband died 4 weeks after being diagnosed with cancer. Grief mixed with confusion and anger and exhaustion. The anger that the life we planned would never happen was so huge.

    Shelley Colleen
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I just lost a friend to glioblastoma. Absolutely evil affliction that literally no one survives. My friend's only symptoms were extreme fatigue and brain fog but, by the time they sought medical care, they were estimated only 3-4 weeks of time left. Brilliant human, did everything right. I can only imagine adding painfully irrational behavior on top of that trauma.

    Lee Panther
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My partner has the same thing but they managed to remove most of it. It will come back Radio hit him hard and he's not been well enough to continue chemo for nearly 6 months now. It is so very VERY hard.

    Dori
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My MIL died of brain cancer. She'd had cancer for years, metastasized all over. Once it got to her brain she refused to treat. I think she was tired of treating. I believe her death helped to end our marriage: my ex was very close with his mon and honestly so was I. It's a pain that never heals.

    Meaghan Stewart
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is so tragic. But yeah from the start all I could think of was when my ex-husband suddenly started to act strangely. Irrationally jealous, angry, yelling with spittle flying like he’d never done before… his personality had completely changed. I tried so hard to understand and make it work but I had to step back for my own safety, because he refused to go to a therapist or a doctor or the hospital even when he started having little seizures he insisted were stress/panic attacks (from my behaviour, of course). Then I learned from his family he’d had a huge seizure and was unresponsive and had been taken to the hospital where they finally took an MRI and discovered his brain was bleeding (likely from an old football injury in HS). He had surgery and within weeks he was back to his old self. It’s amazing how much something like that can change someone. Clearly we still had our differences and divorced years later but for another reason entirely.

    Crystalwitch60
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Op please don’t feel sorry for feeling angry x it is perfectly normal to feel this and something anyone grieving has to go thru , as witchy lady said 7 stages of grief and they take time , as much time as you need ! Never let anyone tell you to move on etc that is a you thing totally , grief is highly personal , and different for all ,the one thing that will help you when the anger overwhelms you lovely is to go for a log. Walk out in the country side find a quiet spot and scream and shout at the sky at the world and him u till you can’t anymore it’s called primal screaming and it really really helps those feelings you just can’t process , I’ve no idea if you will see these as this is on be but we are all still here for you , blessed be to you and your furbaby , n I’m so very sorry for your loss 💔

    ROSESARERED
    Community Member
    7 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My sister had a brain tumour, thankfully not cancerous, removed 20 years ago this month. Was so stressful. Thankfully we still have her, and she is still the person we know. Two surgeons, 9½hours of surgery..she could have had a stoke, brain dead, total personality change, lose her speech, sight, hearing, taste, smell. Losing her would have broken our world apart. She only lost her ability to smell, she is still her. My heart breaks for this woman...some of her steps I walked. It is hard, so hard, as any life threatening illness is. God bless. Love those you love with all you can, life can be too short

    weatherwitch
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It was very apparent that something was medically wrong, my presumption had been a form of psychosis. This poor poor lady, I hoped for a better outcome but it was not to be. The dog enabled her to reconnect, make a little way of the darkness of grief because she had to take care of it. You Have to face the world with a dog, see nature, feel the sun on your face and the wind in your hair... And these micro moments are comforting, healing as is the love of a dog. Poor woman 😔

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