I’ve been thinking a lot about death lately. Death and grief and the impending doom of losing my mom. (Yeah, I know. I’m super fun these days.)
I’ve also been thinking a lot about how much my mom’s Alzheimer’s has affected me; how much it has changed me.
I often ask myself why my mom’s illness has had such a heavy influence on my life. After all, I’m not the one who is sick. I’m not my mom’s caregiver. I don’t even live with her. Yet, I have almost completely put my own life on hold to navigate this experience.
Why?
Why is it that some people are able to carry on with their own lives with a parent’s Alzheimer’s as just a side note? Something that pops up every so often to interrupt their normal lives before they return to business as usual?
Why is it that death and grief and loss affect people so differently?
Why has it affected me so greatly, so fully, so deeply?
Well, I am an empath, so pretty much everything in life affects me greatly, fully, and deeply. I can’t get through a day without feeling all the emotions that are humanly possible. It is often a blessing and a curse.
Maybe it is just my nature as an empath to stop and allow myself to really feel what I’m going through, to really hold space with these emotions, to fully absorb the profoundness of this experience.
I am going through a monumental time in my life right now. Losing your mother is a deeply profound experience. It only happens once. It is a mile marker in your life that forever changes the way you look at everything. It forever divides your life into the before and after.
How could it not affect you greatly? How could it not have a heavy influence on your life?
Grief, pain, sadness, and loss are all part of the human experience. They play a bigger role in some people’s lives than others, but I am oddly comforted by the fact that everyone in existence will experience these emotions at some point in their life.
Everyone in existence will feel grief, pain, and sadness at some point.
Everyone in existence will lose their mother at some point.
And to feel all of these things, the highest of highs and the lowest of lows, is that not what it means to truly live? If you are experiencing it all, if you are feeling all of the emotions, doesn’t that just mean you are truly living a full life?
Losing a parent rocks your world. It forces you to grow up even if you’re already grown. It changes you.
Maybe it doesn’t change you so much as it shapes you into the person you were always meant to become. Maybe you don’t break, but you bend, you curve, you shape. You become a whole person who is living a whole life.
Life is about love and joy and happiness, but it’s also about pain and loss and sadness. Grief is part of the package. It’s part of the deal. You can’t have love without loss and you don’t grieve without loving first.
In thinking about the inevitable death of my mom, I feel pain and sadness, panic and dread. I know my world is about to be rocked. It’s only a matter of time.
But I also refuse to numb myself to this part of the human experience. I refuse not to learn anything from it. I refuse to move through my life quickly in an attempt to outrun my grief. It’s here. It’s with me. It will never leave me.
I will always acknowledge the enormity of the situation. I will always acknowledge how deep the grief cuts me. But I will also get through it to live a life that somehow does my mom’s suffering justice.
I know this experience, this loss, will force me to grow. It’s part of my life. It’s part of my story. It’s part of me. I am becoming the person I was always meant to be.
Death is tough. Grief is tough. But so is the human heart. It is designed to hold a complex range of emotions all at once. It is designed to break and yet somehow, its pieces stay intact.
It is meant to love and grieve at the same exact time. To use it for both just means you are truly living.
The highest of highs, the lowest of lows.
Your heart will shatter, but as they say, the cracks are how the light gets in.

Gosh, everything you write resonates with me so much. I can’t thank you enough for putting it into words that make me feel less alone on this journey.
This image is so beautiful.
“Maybe it doesn’t change you so much as it shapes you into the person you were always meant to become. Maybe you don’t break, but you bend, you curve, you shape. You become a whole person who is living a whole life.”
I have a small tattoo of a tree because to me they signify that flexibility in weathering storms yet continuing to stand rooted and strong and cycling through life. Thank you!
You’re so welcome, Jenn! I am so happy my words help and comfort you during this difficult time. Thank you for your kind words!