Body & Soul0 min ago
Talking To Deceased Relatives
36 Answers
Think you all know the story about my mums terminal cancer so no need to give the back story.
However, had a call from my sister this morning to say that she had been up all night listening to my mum having conversations with her brother. He died last year.
Rang her this evening after work and she said that she's still the same. Doesnt know who my sister is now but carries on talking to her brother.
Only saw her a couple of days ago, and whilst in pain and a bit grumpy and sleepy, seemed quiet lucid....spent some time watching tv, talking about the news etc.
You hear stories like this....people close to death and talking to past relatives...but its freaking me out a bit.
Anyone else had similar experiences?
However, had a call from my sister this morning to say that she had been up all night listening to my mum having conversations with her brother. He died last year.
Rang her this evening after work and she said that she's still the same. Doesnt know who my sister is now but carries on talking to her brother.
Only saw her a couple of days ago, and whilst in pain and a bit grumpy and sleepy, seemed quiet lucid....spent some time watching tv, talking about the news etc.
You hear stories like this....people close to death and talking to past relatives...but its freaking me out a bit.
Anyone else had similar experiences?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes. My nan used to think my granddad was her father, she's often talk to him as if he was. What is strange about that is my nan never met her father, she hadn't even seen a picture of him.
She thought my OH was her twin brother. When her twin died we decided not to tell her. I went to pick her up from her care home and the first thing she said to me was 'I'm not a twin anymore' she chose to say that to me not even knowing who I was.
Other times were funny. I'd explain I was taking her to see her husband. She followed me into the kitchen and said he wasn't her husband, he's an old man and she was only 40.
It changed daily. Saddening.
She thought my OH was her twin brother. When her twin died we decided not to tell her. I went to pick her up from her care home and the first thing she said to me was 'I'm not a twin anymore' she chose to say that to me not even knowing who I was.
Other times were funny. I'd explain I was taking her to see her husband. She followed me into the kitchen and said he wasn't her husband, he's an old man and she was only 40.
It changed daily. Saddening.
As others have said, it's quite usual - she knows her time is near and her mind is turning to those who have gone before her (it really doesn't make a difference if she expressed such thoughts before,now is different).
My Mum in her final days watched her life play out as if in a film on the ceiling of her room, she would occasionally tell us what was happening with a glorious smile.
My Mum in her final days watched her life play out as if in a film on the ceiling of her room, she would occasionally tell us what was happening with a glorious smile.
Whats really freaking me out a bit, TBH, is that last night I woke with a start after dreaming that I was pushing a cart with her coffin on it to the front of the crematorim...and then my sister rang with this news.
Ive never once had a dream about my mother, since her diagnosis, that I can recall, never mind one about her dying. Ive accepted that she is dying, albeit slowly.
Ive never once had a dream about my mother, since her diagnosis, that I can recall, never mind one about her dying. Ive accepted that she is dying, albeit slowly.
Why is is freaking you out, because you don't believe ? Your Mum's grasp on life is tenuous now and she's able to see and converse with lost loved ones. Happens a lot. I know a lovely, elderly lady who was dying in hospital and she kept saying to her daughters 'look at your Dad stood there waiting for me' and then at other times her arm would suddenly shoot up and she'd say that Jim (her deceased husband) is pulling her arm because he wants her to go with him. She wasn't scared, just irritated with him because she didn't feel she was ready ! However, she did die very soon afterwards and it was lovely to think of them strolling off arm in arm together.
Yes, twice when my mum was close to death she had conversations with her parents both of whom had died decades previously. On both occasion mum pulled through and told us that her parents had stood one either side of her, holding her hands, telling her it wasn't her time and they would see her in due course.
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