avatarJacqueline Dooley

Summary

The author shares their personal journey of grief after losing their daughter Ana to cancer, detailing the profound impact on their life and the struggle to find a new normal while carrying the weight of their loss.

Abstract

The American Cancer Society reports that about 600 adolescents aged 15 to 19 die from cancer each year, and in 2017, Ana, the daughter of the author, was among them. Ana battled cancer for four and a half years, and despite her declining health, the author initially believed she would overcome the disease. When it became clear that Ana would not survive, the focus shifted to ensuring a peaceful passing. The loss of Ana left the author in a state of existential crisis, questioning the meaning of life and the natural order. The daily routines became a challenge, and the author felt an overwhelming need to share Ana's story with everyone they encountered, as a way to acknowledge their pain and keep Ana's memory alive. Although the author has learned to control the impulse to share Ana's story with everyone, they still openly acknowledge Ana's death when asked about their children. The grief has reshaped the author's identity, making them more fearful and protective of their remaining daughter, Emily. The author wishes for understanding and empathy from others, recognizing that they will never return to their pre-loss self and that their soul has been permanently altered by the experience.

Opinions

  • The author believes that sharing Ana's story is crucial to their healing process and a way to maintain a connection with their daughter.
  • They express a sense of injustice and disbelief at the loss of their vibrant and healthy child to cancer.
  • The author acknowledges that their perspective on life and their personality have been fundamentally changed by their daughter's death.
  • There is a palpable fear of potential loss and harm coming to their surviving daughter, Emily.
  • The author feels that societal interactions, such as small talk, are trivial in comparison to the gravity of their loss and prefers to connect on a deeper level with others who understand grief.
  • They find solace in connecting with others who have experienced similar losses, suggesting that shared grief can provide comfort and understanding.

My Child Died

Illustration by Jacqueline Dooley

According to the American Cancer Society, about 600 adolescents, aged 15 to 19, die from cancer each year.

In 2017, my daughter, Ana, was one of them.

Ana was sick for four and a half years. During most of that time, even as her cancer progressed, I didn’t think that she was going to die from her disease.

I thought that she would beat it. I thought that her tenacious will to live would help her overcome the odds, and that scientists or doctors would invent something miraculous to shrink her tumors and restore her health.

When it eventually became obvious that a miracle wasn’t going to happen for Ana, I turned my focus to helping her die.

Her death pulled the rug out from under my life. It shattered my understanding of the presumed natural order of things. It left me with the dilemma of trying to make my way in a world that made absolutely no sense to me. It robbed me of my ability to feel joy, at least for a while.

Ana, Age 8

Living without Ana wasn’t something I’d ever considered. When I did let myself think about it — her empty room, my empty days — my mind recoiled from the thought.

But it happened, the worst possible outcome — I woke up one morning in a world without Ana.

I had to get out of bed, had to do laundry, had to try and function for my husband and my remaining daughter. I had to walk Ana’s dog and feed her ancient gerbil (a creature, to my unending chagrin, that had outlived his own life expectancy by nearly triple the length).

There were a million everyday scenarios that required me to move through life as if a piece of my heart wasn’t permanently gone. Those early days of living in a post-Ana world felt like an affront.

Back then, I had an almost obsessive need to tell whoever crossed my path that my daughter died.

“Don’t you understand?” I wanted yell, “None of this matters because my daughter died!” (by “this” I meant everything — work, life, the upcoming season of Game of Thrones and everything in between).

Sometimes I did (and still do) tell total strangers— I blurt it out or I slip it into an email, because I want them to know. I need them to know.

My child died. That happened. I am here and she is not.

Ana, age 11

I barely worked for months after I lost her. I spent my time walking outside and watching birds. I searched for her, for any sign she was trying to communicate. I stared up at the sky constantly.

I outsourced most of my work to subcontractors who kept my consulting business going while I drifted through the days in a fog of numbness and grief.

Back then, most people who knew me knew that Ana had died. I’d been blogging about her for years.

I also told everyone — and I mean everyone — her story. Bank tellers, a rabbi I’d just met, prospective new clients, my dental hygienist, a life insurance broker, unsuspecting cashiers and the mechanic who fixes my car. I told them all. It made for some very awkward moments.

I eventually learned to suppress the urge to tell every single person I met about Ana. But I’ll never stop saying her name and when someone asks how many children I have, I will never hesitate in my response.

“I have two daughters,” I will tell the unsuspecting questioner, “One living and one who died from cancer.”

It’s probably harder to hear that than to say it.

The fact that I’m no longer telling everyone about Ana could be construed as some measure of progress. But, from where I’m standing, it doesn’t feel like much.

It’s taken me two years to get to a place where, sometimes, I feel almost okay, but this wound hasn’t healed, not by a long shot.

Ana, Age 13

I think part of my compulsion to tell people about Ana, and about the long, painful trajectory of her illness, is that sometimes I still don’t quite believe it all happened.

Ana was a healthy, vibrant child before she got sick. She’d never been hospitalized. She hated needles and doctors. She loved cats and swimming. She was supposed to grow up.

I had no idea how lucky I was before cancer came into my home and took up residence. It’s appalling, really, the assumptions I’d made about cancer and terminal illness and grief, before I was dragged into this darkness.

I haven’t fully emerged from a place of despair. I probably never will. There are people I knew before Ana got sick that I don’t see or talk to anymore. I’ve withdrawn from them, for the most part, and in some cases, they’ve withdrawn from me.

I can’t really blame them. I’m a completely different person now. The version of myself that existed before I lost Ana, died with her.

Ana, Age 15

I am a more fearful mother, afraid of losing Emily, my remaining daughter. I am always bracing for catastrophe.

When I drop Emily off at school each morning, I push away visions of a gun-wielding kids bursting into her homeroom, erasing her from my life.

When something hurts — her head, her hip, her arm — my head fills with visions of tumors growing on her bones or in her brain.

In a little less than two years, she’ll be driving, and I will have to squash the images of fiery car crashes that will inevitably haunt my troubled imagination.

I want the universe to spare me from anymore loss. I want people to understand the weight I’m carrying and help me carry it.

I want them to accept that I’ll never be my old self again — the shape of my soul is different. A piece of it is gone. It’s this way for all of us, the grieving parents of the world. I wish we could get a free pass from further pain forever.

I know it doesn’t work like that. I was lucky once, incapable of believing that either of my children could die even though the evidence was all around me.

Ana, age 15 (with her dog, Roo), a few days before she died

These days, I’m more selective about who I tell about Ana. I tell the people that have the potential to stay in my life for more than a brief moment.

I tell them because I can’t bring myself to care about small talk or politics or the cost of gasoline. I’m compelled to acknowledge my new self, my changed self, and hope that they accept this broken version of me. Some of them do. As it turns out, grief lurks below the surface for many of us.

It’s a true source of solace to meet someone who can walk this lonely path with me. Sharing grief makes it more bearable. That’s the biggest reason I tell people that my child died.

Parenting
Grief
Mental Health
Family
Memoir
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