My mother had dementia, and by the time I placed her in a nursing home, she barely knew who I was. Leaving her felt like betrayal, even though I was exhausted and afraid she wasn’t safe at home. Every visit ended in tears, and every promise to come sooner went unkept.
When she died, I expected only emptiness. Instead, I found a young caregiver sitting beside her, holding her hand. She had stayed after her shift so my mother wouldn’t be alone. She told me she read to her, brushed her hair, and talked to her softly until the end.
Months later, I discovered a notebook the caregiver had kept—small notes about my mother’s likes, her smiles, her restlessness. On the last page it read: “She talked about her daughter today. She loved her very much.”
That notebook didn’t erase my guilt, but it showed me something I desperately needed to know: even when I couldn’t be there, my mother was loved—and never alone.