The Suffering
This past weekend in the group, many moms shared a deep and aching pain:
the fear and grief around their child’s suffering, and the heartbreak of not being there when they died; the unknown.
There is a particular kind of grief that comes from imagining what your child may have felt, wondering if they were scared, in pain, or alone. Alongside that often comes the quiet, haunting wish:
If I had been there, maybe I could have saved them. The guilt.
Even when we know, logically, that we could not have changed the outcome, the love of a mother still asks what if.
If this is where your grief sits today, please know this: That wish does not mean you failed.
It means you loved deeply, fiercely, and without limits.
Grief can carry both truth and longing at the same time. The truth that you could not have prevented what happened, and the longing that says you would have done anything to protect your child from suffering.
Today, coping doesn’t have to mean resolving those thoughts.
It can look like:
- Letting the ache exist without arguing with it
- Offering yourself the same compassion you would give another grieving mother
- Releasing the burden of responsibility your heart still tries to carry
- Choosing rest over replaying the unanswerable questions
You loved your child.
You still do.
And nothing about their suffering erases that love or your goodness as a mother. Stay the course.
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