Damus
Lyn Alden profile picture
Lyn Alden
@LynAlden
Losing someone young, or losing an older person while you are young, is always hard.

When my father passed away from cancer while I was in my early twenties, it wasn't surprising at all. This fact had been coming for two years, slowly. But when it came, it hurt just as bad. And till this day it still hurts.

I was at work and got a call; it was a hospital. They said my father had been suddenly transferred to hospice, and it wasn't looking good. He probably had a week at most. He was in another state. The doctor transferred my father to me on the phone and my father was weakly like, "hey...." and I said hello, and I said I'm coming now. He said, "No don't... uhh.... don't worry... you are far and have work... I'm fine...." I asked then why was he transferred to hospice if things were fine. He was like, "uh well... well you know.... uh.... it's fine...." And I was like, "holy shit I'm coming right now."

So I went to my boss and looked at him. I had previously told him that there might be a moment where I would have to just immediately leave without notice, no matter how important the meetings and such, because of my father. So in this moment I literally just looked at him in the middle of a busy day and was like, "I gotta go" and he was like "of course". So I drove there, two hours away and went straight there. My father weakly said on the phone not to go, but he never sounded like that, so I went immediately.

I got there, and my father was in a hospital in the death ward, and the guy who greeted me was a pastor rather than a nurse, which was not a great sign. I asked what was going on and he told me straight up that this was not good, that my father was likely dying within a week. So he brings me to my father. My father is barely awake. His memories and statements are all over the place, but I just hold his hand and tell him that it's fine and I love him. I'm just there. He kept fading out and I was like, "it's okay, just relax". He could see me and talk in a rough sentence or two and thanked me for coming, but started to fade away.

And then after like 30 minutes, he went fully unconscious. He was still roughly gripping and shaking the bed headboard and so forth but wasn't conscious (and I was like, "Are you all giving him the right pain medicines, this doesn't look good", and even the pastor was like, "yes I have seen many and this is not comfortable" and I was like an angry 23-year-old so I went out in the center area like, "what do all of you even fucking do here?! He is shaking the bedframe and looks in pain, and even the pastor agrees. Holy shit." So I went and got medical attention to deal with this, but felt slow and ineffective at this. They gave him more morphine and it calmed him down, but while it relaxed him, he ultimately didn't wake up again.

I spent the next couple hours there, and then left and called various family members for my second round when he was unmoving. I said if they want to see him, come now, in the next day or two.

But a little while later after I left, I got a call and was told he had died. Only I (and the nurses) saw him while he was still briefly conscious.

During that call itself, I was stoic. I was like, "Yes, I understand. Okay." and then hung up. And then I sat there for like five minutes in silence... and then cried. I got over it quickly and we did the funeral in the following days. My father had been struggling with cancer for years, so this wasn't fully surprising.

But what lingered was the memory. It has been 13 years now, and yet whenever I am in my depths I still think of my father. The memory never gets weaker. I think of his love, or I think of how attentive he was, or how accepting he was, or what he would say about my current problems.

People we love, live on through us. We remember them so vividly, and we are inspired by them.

If he was a lame father, he wouldn't have so many direct memories 13 years later. But because he was a good and close father, he does.

All of those memories are gifts. All of them are ways of keeping aspects of that person alive in our world. It's how we remember them in the decades that follow. Their victories, their losses, and everything in between. Virtues they quietly did that you find out later. Virtues you realize only in hindsight how big they were.
5416❤️117🤙160🫂17💜8❤️73
Stephen Burns · 127w
Im sorry for your fathers loss Lyn, lost my mother in 2015. Reminds me of her , thank you
BTCrevolutionary · 127w
Thanks for sharing this Lyn. My father passed away unexpectedly almost three years ago. Still feels like it was yesterday and the pain never really goes away. Appreciate your openness… God bless… this post hit me hard
gotcha · 127w
Thanks for sharing such deep thoughts and emotions. Letting go those that we love is such a big part of life.
paulo · 127w
I can relate to this. My father died too when I was very young. 🫂🫂🫂🫂
BitcoinSandy · 127w
Lovely words Lyn, my father passed 10 years ago and I wasn’t there when he left. I also think of him. He was a deep person but was afraid to show it. I miss the possible chances we may have had to know each other better. I sense him sometimes 🤙
Theory of Everything · 127w
(Hug) Your parents never really leave you. You are literally half of each of them.
Joel · 127w
Thanks for sharing, Lyn. 🙏🏼❤️
Moss · 127w
🫂💜Thanks for sharing
magicka · 127w
Very moving, thank you for sharing that
nik ⚡️🟠🟣 · 127w
Thank you for sharing it, Lyn! 🧡🙏💜
crimsonleaf363 · 127w
Thank you Lyn ❤️
Wendy Walters · 127w
Your story made me feel the same way, i lost my father a year ago, i missed my father’s voice, his charming That past actually made me stronger
Asdf · 127w
Thank you for sharing. Your story teaches me as a parent thar when I'm gone they can use their memories of me to gain strength to carry on.
nobody · 127w
I’ve managed to reach 52 years of age without losing anyone close to me. With the next 5 years lining up to be the first where I say goodbye to both parents, my dear remaining grandmother, and (already) some of my bros due to health issues, your words and advice are golden. Thanks for sharing Lyn.
kristen · 127w
🫂
Chako Chino · 127w
Thanks for sharing Lyn. I can relate as I was caring for both my Mother and Father who were both dying of cancer at the same time. I was in my early 30’s. My Father fought to the end with every means possible - extending his life by a year but with very difficult treatments. My mother on the other...
Lyudmyla Kozlovska · 127w
I agree and share your pain. 🙏 I lost my father after 6 months of faulty cancer treatment. He could have lived longer with us, but the corrupt medical system allowed access to treatment to a young guy who didn't understand the power of a single dose of radiation therapy... so he multiplied and s...
Pascalito · 127w
I often think about my late grandma and grandpa, being grateful for their love and also wondering what their lives were like, the problems they faced and struggles they had to go through. Looking at their lives from my now adult perspective kind of makes me rediscover them and shines a new way on ho...
Kendal · 127w
Wow Lyn thank you so much for sharing this
James Rippeon · 127w
This is profound. Thank you for sharing. I went through something similar with my mom last year. It changes you. Or, at least, helps you see certain things into a new perspective.
Bitwave21 · 127w
Thanks Lyn, this is beautiful. I lost my father 20 years ago and miss him every day. Love the sharing.
EMH · 127w
Fuck cancer.
David W · 127w
Instincts are powerful and to be trusted. What a tough time that must have been. I’m really glad you got to share those moments and comfort your father, like he no doubt did for you during your youth. You’re an inspiration to a lot of us, with your hard work & intellect. Not only us, but withou...
Zach · 127w
❤️
Scale Bar · 127w
🫂❤️
Propaganda Daily · 127w
❤️🙏 thank you for sharing
Anonymous · 127w
Didn’t need the 1:42pm cry but here we are. Similar position in my own life. Feel for you Lyn. 💜
Alejandro · 127w
Thank you for sharing this. I’m very far away from my parents, them in Spain and me in US and as they get older, I get more worried about the distance.
M-Vil · 127w
Thanks
Hazey · 127w
😢
Rlpr · 127w
Thanks Lyn, you are the very best bitcoiner-engineer :)
Purple Painter · 127w
Lyn I love reading your stories. You are a talented writer. I appreciate your sincerity and openness. Thanks for all the moments you share!
rustyspark · 127w
Thank you for sharing. I have lost some dear, dear friends, father figure mother figure brother figure. Not family, but I worry sometimes that I may not grieve some family as I have grieved these. Either for a sense of connectedness, or heaven forbid I become more calloused to loss as I get older. B...
Colby · 127w
🫂💜
Jimbo Galtomoto · 127w
Very moving, thanks Lyn. Loss like this is a hole and it’s going to stay a hole. Sounds like you had a great dad ❤️
Andre 🇮🇹 Nostr only · 127w
Thanks for sharing 🧡
silva · 127w
Very profound, thanks for sharing.
Not my name · 127w
For something so very, very natural, it never ceases to amaze me how naive about and afraid of death and dying we are made to be. I’m sorry your experience was such that it left a negative lasting impression. The palliative care ward in US hospitals (I sure hope no one else so callously refers t...
bitjoon · 127w
My Father died from a long struggle with cancer 14 years ago. A similar story of long drives and too much time to think before his passing. Your note brought tears but memories of good times with him. Thank you for sharing. 💜
NyamiDev · 127w
Thank you for writing that.
pixel lust · 127w
i always thought it was strange how we don’t get to choose our memories. we remember lots of bad ones yet forget lots of good ones. i agree that the ones that we do keep are for some reason gifts. thx for sharing so candidly, bitcoiners are so lucky to have you.
SATSMAN · 127w
Thank you for sharing. RIP DAD!
KyleM. · 127w
Thank you for sharing Lyn. Very moving. I remember when my father passed and how intensely present I felt in the face of ultimate silence.
Stewart · 127w
Of course you were there. What a blessing to have your memories.
Psilocyberbull · 127w
Balling. Thank you
in the rye · 127w
I sometimes do the same thing as you. Putting significant feelings into words. I feel that looking at myself carefully can be healing. When I think back on things that struck my heartstrings, the memories slowly reappear, so I write them down in as much detail as possible. By doing so, the mind beco...
Kiran Kaur · 126w
♥️
Joe Cizin · 124w
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