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Guilt, yes, do I dwell on it, no. Caring for a LO is like raising children, there was no previous training. We learn as we go. What I learned is I don't have the patience needed and I overwhelm easily.
So it comes down to I refuse to feel guilty. I did my best.
It's made more difficult b/c we're dealing with our family or friends' lives, not something that can be redone.
I doubt that I will ever feel I did as much as I could, in part b/c now I know so much more about caregiving. But it's also critical to remember that each of us is just one person and can only do so much, and that the societal and system supports financially and otherwise aren't as available as they should be. That's a major deficit of care in the US.
Some words to explore. "Normal human inadequacies", "grief over limitations". "Pain at what my elder had to endure". "Helplessness in the face of human limitations". "Heartbreak at what we all had to endure".
Life changes are worth mourning. "Guilt" holds us back from progressing lovingly through the mourning process.
You are way ahead of the game. You already recognize that you did the best you can at the time with the tools you had.
You have posted this under the correct headings. Care decisions. They must be made. End of life. It will come. Grief. You are mourning. I don't even know what the word "guilt" has to do with forum choices myself. Guilt belongs on a forum for felons.