Nobody Should Believe Me - S04 Ep08: The Long Goodbye
Episode Date: August 8, 2024Just as Jo has made huge personal strides in the spring of 2023, Donna slides into a coma and Jo returns to Hutchinson to say what they will believe to be their final goodbyes. However, even Donna’s... “deathbed” isn’t what it seems, and she ends up pulling through: leaving Jo to manage the complicated process of setting boundaries with their mother after yet another dramatic brush with death. Over the next year, Jo continues to thrive and heal their relationship with their sister: just in time for the two to receive a shocking phone call. *** Links/Resources: Preorder Andrea's new book The Mother Next Door: Medicine, Deception, and Munchausen by Proxy Click here to view our sponsors. Remember that using our codes helps advertisers know you’re listening and helps us keep making the show! Subscribe on YouTube where we have full episodes and lots of bonus content. Follow Andrea on Instagram for behind-the-scenes photos: @andreadunlop Buy Andrea's books here. To support the show, go to Patreon.com/NobodyShouldBelieveMe or subscribe on Apple Podcasts where you can get all episodes early and ad-free and access exclusive bonus content. For more information and resources on Munchausen by Proxy, please visit MunchausenSupport.com The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children’s MBP Practice Guidelines can be downloaded here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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When you love someone like Joe's mom, Donna, or my sister, Megan,
it means that illness and death, either theirs or that of their children,
are just sort of constantly hanging around like this unwelcome house guest.
There is this fear that I hear from listeners sometimes that their own anxious behaviors around illness or around their children
will make them seem like they're engaging in munchausen behaviors.
But what is hard to explain to people who haven't experienced this
is just how all-consuming these behaviors actually are.
It's an obsession that gets more intense over time.
And much like an addiction, the person has to keep upping the ante
so that everything, the lying, to keep upping the ante so that
everything, the lying, the illnesses, and the brushes with death get more extreme and more
frequent. And with Megan, this escalation meant going through a different kind of death.
There's this person that I remember from childhood. And yeah, looking back, especially
talking to my parents about their memories,
the illness stuff, hers, her pets, that was always there too.
But when I look back at us as kids, there was a whole person there with hobbies and interests and just other things about them
other than this obsession with illness.
But that person disappeared over time.
It was like her obsession was devouring her from the inside.
And by the end, the sister I said goodbye to 14 years ago,
she was a shell of the person I'd once known.
And now, I have no idea.
And the person I've read about in the police reports about her daughter,
the accounts I've listened to from people who were there,
I still have trouble reconciling that person with the accounts I've listened to from people who were there, I still have trouble
reconciling that person with the person I grew up with. One thing I know that Meg and I loved,
she's gone. Today, we're talking about how complicated these losses are.
What does it mean to lose a person who was never really there?
People believe their eyes. That's something that is so central to this topic
because we do believe the people that we love when they're telling us something. If we didn't,
you could never make it through your day. I'm Andrea Dunlop, and this 2025. It's here. This year is going to be, well, one thing it won't be is boring.
And that's about the only prediction I'm going to make right now. But one piece of news that I am excited to share is that the wait for my new book, The Mother Next Door, is almost over. It is coming at you
on February 4th from St. Martin's Press. So soon! I co-authored this book with friend and beloved
contributor of this show, Detective Mike Weber, about three of the most impactful cases of his
career. Even if you are one of the OG-est
of OG listeners to this show, I promise you are going to learn so many new and shocking details
about the three cases we cover. We just go into so much more depth on these stories, and you're
also going to learn a ton about Mike's story. Now, I know y'all love Detective Mike because he gets
his very own fan mail here at Nobody Should Believe Me.
And if you've ever wondered, how did Mike become the detective when it came to Munchausen by proxy cases, you are going to learn all about his origin story in this book.
And I know we've got many audiobook listeners out there, so I'm very excited to share with
you the audiobook is read by me, Andrea Dunlop, your humble narrator of this very show. I really loved
getting to read this book and I'm so excited to share this with you. If you are able to pre-order
the book, doing so will really help us out. It will signal to our publisher that there is excitement
about the book and it will also give us a shot at that all-important bestseller list. And of course,
if that's simply not in the budget right now, we get it. Books are not cheap.
Library sales are also extremely important for books, so putting in a request at your local library is another way that you can help. So you can pre-order the book right now in all formats
at the link in our show notes, and if you are in Seattle or Fort Worth, Mike and I are doing live
events the week of launch, which you can also find more information about at the link in our show notes. These events will be free to attend, but please do RSVP so that we can plan accordingly.
See you out there. Calling all sellers. Salesforce is hiring account executives to join us on the
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If you'd like to support the show,
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so important for independent podcasts. For more, you can now find us on YouTube, where we have all
of our episodes as well as bonus video content. After their television appearance on The Doctors,
Joe had some follow-up with their family
members, including Crystal, who had mixed feelings about how Joe presented their childhood. But by
the spring of 2023, Joe was doing great. They were a member of the APSAC committee, they were in
school getting their degree in social work, and they were working for Munchausen Support. And just
overall, really moving forward. But this is the
thing about having a Donna or a Megan in your life. You're always waiting for the other shoe to drop.
The only guarantee, if there isn't any drama going on right this second, there's about to be. And as
her children got some distance from her, Donna's obsession with her own health took back over.
And one day, things took a turn.
My mom had been in and out of the hospital. And even after that, she was still always in and out of the hospital. So I stopped really paying attention. Anytime that I've talked to my mom,
the first thing she tells me about is how sick she is and all of her hospitalizations and all
these things going on with her. That's actually pretty much all that our conversations end up being.
And then it's like, oh, how good are you doing?
Like, how healthy are you?
And stuff like that.
But then one day I was driving to go do a tour thing for class and my sister called and my sister never calls me. So I answered and
my sister said things are actually like not good. I wanted to like make sure because you know mom
how she'll be in the hospital one day and then out the next but she is currently in a coma and they don't think she's going to make it.
Now, this wasn't Donna's first brush with death or even her first coma, but still,
talking to Crystal, to Joe, this time felt different.
I just wanted to let you know in case you wanted to, like, come say your goodbyes.
And I got off the phone and I was like, well, I'm still going to go do the school thing first.
Like, I got to get that done.
And I pulled into the parking lot and I just started having a full blown panic attack.
And I think it just all hit me.
And I was like, oh, I can't.
And I decided that I was going to pack a bag and go say my goodbyes.
You know, every time I saw my mom, I've seen her very few times
since 2016. And every time I saw her, because I thought she has always been dying, I was like,
this could be the last time. So anytime I left, I kind of left knowing that I might never see her
again. And it was kind of weird. Literally two days prior to all of this,
I had been telling someone, like,
I always think my mom's dying,
but I'm really realizing, like, she's not dying.
Like, she's totally okay.
And then two days later, I get this call,
and my little magical thinking brain was like,
you did this, you caused this,
because it's always my fault.
This programming that Joe is responsible for Donna's
well-being rather than the other way around is a deep-seated part of the abuse. Joe was trained
from birth that it was their job to give Donna what she needed, that it was their very reason for existing. And so I hopped in the car and I drove nine hours to Minnesota. And then I drove
to the hospital, to the ICU. And I went in and my mom was laying there in a coma on a ventilator. And just seeing her like that
brought me straight back to 2011. And in 2011, I mean, things were really, really serious. We
had sat down with the doctors and had like that conversation of like, we're going to pull the
plug in a couple of days. And when they did their rounds, they like told me when I was there this time,
like they told me, you know, at some point we're going to have to like sit down
with you and your sister and talk about things because things don't look good.
Ironically, they kept saying that my mom was the most complicated case in the hospital.
And I kept saying she would really like that if she could hear that. And so she was still
getting her wishes, I guess. But they took all the meds and stuff off and she was still in a coma
and they couldn't figure out why. And this went on for like, I want to say like a week where they
had no idea why she wasn't waking up. They didn't know if she would ever wake
up. But when I went in that first day, I didn't know how much alone time I would get with my mom
because I didn't know how much my sister would want to be there because I knew I wanted to be
there every second of every day for as long as I could for all the visiting hours, which looking
back just shows I think that I still have that back just shows, I think, that I still
have that desire to be with my mom and that I still just love her so much and was like
brought back to that younger me, like little me, just wanting to be with my mom and hopefully
help her feel better.
But so since I was there early, my sister wasn't there yet. So I sat down and I grabbed my mom's hand and I decided to say my final goodbyes before that.
I thought like that might be my only chance before there would always be people in the room.
Hi, mom. It's Jo, your baby girl. I hope you can hear me.
Came all the way from St. Louis. There's so much that I want to say. I wish you could see me.
My hair's gotten longer and it's super curly.
You would love that. I keep thinking of you with my curly hair because I know how much you loved when my hair was long and curly. They're taking good care of you. I'm so sorry. I wish you called me. I just want to see you one
more time. Well, I see you. I want you to see me. I forgive you, okay?
And I love you so much.
I just had to have boundaries of all to take care of myself too, you know?
My life is really good, Mom.
But I still expect you to be sitting in that chair tomorrow.
You have to.
Just like last time.
Can you hear me in there?
Can you feel me?
I'm mad at you for not saying goodbye.
It was very nice of you.
I think after everything you owe me a goodbye.
That was different than what i heard even just a few hours ago when i had listened to it when we went to hutchinson earlier this year joe and i sat down and listened to this tape together
of them at their mom's bedside and reflected on it i definitely feel a lot more emotional and I can just like vividly like
remember sitting there holding her hand and just like I said in that moment I would have done
anything for her to open her eyes um and it was like back to that, like feeling of like, Oh, if you like get better, like we can,
we can have a relationship again and things will be okay. And I could move to Minnesota,
like I'll quit school. I'll quit everything. Like I just want my mom. Um, and I just like,
all, I mean, in that all I wanted was for her to be proud of me and like I kept naming things.
I mean I wasn't even actually in cheer anymore and I still told her I was going to nationals for cheer and tumbling and stuff like even though like I wasn't at that point.
But because I was hoping if she did pass that she would hear me and that at least like she could die happy.
Even after everything, all I seem to want is for her to find happiness.
And I know she finds a lot of pleasure in like being able to say how well I'm doing now, which is very odd because it's kind of the opposite of my whole life experience.
But she loves to tell people that I was a cheerleader and that I was in school and how
well I was doing in school and that I had a job and all these things.
Like she loved to talk about that stuff to people.
And I know like whenever I called her, she would get really happy. It's
back and forth. Sometimes she would act like I quite literally didn't exist and would be like,
who are you? Because she was angry at me for having boundaries with her. But on the other
times when she wasn't doing that, she like, you could tell how happy it made her.
Well, what I thought, I mean, it got me to keep calling her, right?
So who really knows?
But I still just wanted her happy.
And I hoped that like her knowing I was there would make her, make her happy.
And yeah, I didn't know.
I thought, like I said, that that would be the last time that I ever, ever talk to her again or the last time she could possibly maybe even hear me. What's up, Spotify?
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I remember this one time we were on tour.
We didn't have any guitar picks,
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For free assistance, call the Connex Ontario helpline at 1-866-531-2600. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. On the one hand, Joe was well aware of their mother's medical deception by this time in their life.
And on the other, you can't really fake being in a coma.
And it wasn't Joe's mom telling them that she was dying. It was the nurses and
the doctors observing her who were telling Joe how unlikely it was that Donna would pull through.
However. She did come out of it, though. And I spent the two weeks that I was there, I was there
12 hours a day, every single day.
I would step out of the room to grab food, and then I would be back in that room.
I did my therapy sessions in the room with my mom,
and I would only leave if the nurses told me, like,
you need to step out for a minute or something like that. But otherwise, I was there with her. And she started to be able to
move her hands a little bit and started to respond a little. And eventually, she did wake up and she
came out of it. She was very delirious. They say that's really common when someone's been in the ICU. They like literally,
I think they call it like ICU delirium. But that time that I had with my mom, even once they took
her off the ventilator, was the best time that I'd ever have experienced her, which was similar,
right, to 2011, where I sat with her and would read the Bible and would brush her hair and would just
like take care of her um that was like the same thing now where when she came off the ventilator
sometimes she didn't quite know who I was most of the time she did when I would say like do you know
who I am she would say yeah Jojo um she always called me Jojo through that time. And she didn't know her own name. If I
asked her who she was, half the time she would say she was Jesus. So she was very out of it.
But we had like such pleasant conversations because of that. Like multiple times a nurse
would be like, you're my favorite patient tonight. Like you're really making my night,
Donna. And I was like, okay, we need to get her out of this ICU before she comes back to herself
because like these people are seeing this side of her that isn't real and I was like they're so nice
to her and stuff and so I was like I we need to get her out and thankfully she did leave the ICU
that time before they, like, saw her.
And just who was Donna?
I like to believe that no person is defined by their worst moments,
even those who commit horrible acts of harm as Donna did.
But when you know that someone is capable of torturing their own children,
even if that's not all they are, what do you even make of the rest of them?
If someone has such a profound lack of empathy, how do you measure anything good about them against that?
How do you frame any act of kindness?
Is it just that, an act?
Or is there some part of them that is good?
Is there some internal struggle that none
of us quite understand? Jo's sister Crystal talks about how, as the years wore on, Donna's behavior
eventually alienated everyone around her. I think she's so lonely, especially now. She's so lonely
because she's lost all of her friends because she treats everybody the same and so nobody other than grandma
really wants to go there um she's sort of putting in some effort right now i think there's some
underlying thing so like obviously you take everything with like that pound of sand instead
of that grain of sand or just or salt whatever you're just like i know there's got to be an
ulterior motive yeah but if she's not asking
for a favor then i'll try to be at least respectful um just because i mean i guess if she
was a family i wouldn't talk to her ever because there's no need um and i don't hope for any
relationship with her like i don't have any hope that one day we'll rekindle and we'll be close again like we you know like it
wasn't always that way even in like my early early years I remember like there was like good mom and
bad mom yeah um and good mom was fun we would get mcdonald's and like do lotion on each other's
backs and do like little games and stuff and then then there'd be bad mom, and you'd hide in your room.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, it's weird.
I've been estranged from my sister Megan for 14 years now,
and my relationship with her absence continues to shift.
For the first few years,
it seemed impossible that this rift could be permanent.
I wrote her a sad letter not long after we became estranged about how I loved her so much,
but I couldn't pretend anymore that nothing was wrong. I told her I'd always be there and that
I'd hope she'd be there on my wedding day and when I had my first baby, as I had been right next to her in those moments in her life.
And I spent those years waiting for a call that never came.
In the years after that, I began to think of her as dead.
There was a sister I had grown up with that I loved,
and that person that lived in my memory, good Megan,
much like Joe's good mom,
was simply gone.
The person who'd taken her place
just wasn't Megan anymore.
And in the years since I've learned the details
of the second investigation into her,
and especially as I've been working on this show,
my understanding of her has undergone another shift.
Increasingly, I expect that good Megan was always an illusion.
It's the part of her that I wanted to see, that she wanted me to see. And now I wonder if it
wasn't always a mask, and the mask over time just got harder to maintain. So maybe it's not that
Megan is gone, it's just that she was never there.
When Joe was in the hospital with their mom as she recovered from the coma that was expected to end her life,
Joe knew it was only a matter of time until the mask,
this one maintained through actual delirium, slipped off.
And when Donna's delirium broke, so did Joe's.
I knew she was supposed to be in the hospital for months.
They say for every day you're in the ICU, you'll probably be in the hospital for like, I think it's like a week or something.
And she was in the ICU for two weeks.
When I left, she couldn't walk.
She could barely move.
She couldn't have any sort of fluids or anything like that.
So they assumed she would be there for quite a while. Once she came out of the delirium, she had other plans for herself. So she left, but
against medical advice. But when I thought she was going to be there for a lot longer,
I had told myself, you know, I'll stay here until either she passes away or until like we know she's going to be leaving the ICU so I knew it was time
for me to leave I knew I needed to get back to school there was a lot of projects I needed to
do for school and like I needed to get back to my life and saying bye to her that day when she like
didn't really even recognize me was so hard because I knew like
walking out that door, like I spent 12 hours a day for two weeks with her. And I, I guarantee
my sister didn't tell her that I was there all that time. And she won't have any memory of it.
You know, she still will see me as this person who doesn't care about her even though like I took care of her
during that time and like all I've ever tried to do is take care of her oh my gosh I walked out
that day and I just started sobbing in my car and like I was so close to just walking back in to
like telling my school like hey I can't come back like I have to stay here and just dropping just
giving up all all the things I've done in my life
so that I could, like, help her and take care of her and be there for her.
And the first week after I left was the hardest week.
I remember I just kept having nightmares all night.
And I, like, would just toss and turn.
And I would feel so bad because I was
now nine hours away what if things turned like I wasn't getting constant text messages and stuff
like that where like before I was physically with her the whole day like I was the one seeing
everything happen and now I just had to trust that people were gonna keep me up to date and let me know what was going on. And it really, it was really hard.
But now I'm to the point
where I haven't talked to her since.
Something really changed for Joe
when Donna went into, and then came out of,
this coma a year ago.
Donna didn't die,
but some piece of the illusion that lived in Joe did.
Joe understood that as long as Donna was alive, she'd be constantly trying to pull them back in.
After the coma, Donna didn't change at all, and anyone still in her orbit was going to be subject
to constant drama. She called because her med box at this point was locked because she had home health aid,
and she called them to have them come open it,
and they were like, we don't have a doctor's order.
So they called the facility she had been at,
and they were like, oh, we didn't know she left.
So that's kind of like where she was at.
And then every few days, she would overdose on, we assume,
probably these same meds.
And she would be found unresponsive and taken to the hospital.
They would go through their thing again.
She would get out.
She would do it again.
It was just kind of this like ongoing thing.
A cop literally watched her.
She was sitting in her chair when he first got there.
He watched her like slide out of her chair and crawl out of his view.
And then by the time he did get in, because he was waiting for the house key for someone to bring it,
by the time he got in, then they found her unresponsive again.
But she was really off the walls.
The time with Donna in the hospital had given Joe unprecedented clarity about their mother.
While looking for answers
about what had led to their mom's hospitalization, Joe had gone through Donna's phone and found
dozens of text messages containing layers and layers of additional half-truths and deceptions,
some to family members and some to names Joe didn't even recognize.
I had found all these texts that she had been sending. So I had really realized like
she had never been as fragile as I had seen her for all these years. And so those two things
combined, I knew that like, it wouldn't be worth it for me to call her or to try to have any
relationship with her. And at the end of the day, I want my memory of her. I just want my memory to be what it was in the hospital.
That was the most pleasant time that I've ever had.
And like, those are the memories that I want to stick.
Crystal and Joe's relationship was in a tough spot a year ago when this coma incident happened.
And one of the very best things that has come out of making this season with Joe
is that during our visit to Hutch, as you heard, Crystal and Joe got a chance to hash things out,
and their relationship has taken a dramatic turn for the better since then. They've been talking
much more frequently, and when Joe started a brand new job earlier this year, they texted me a photo
of the gorgeous bouquet of flowers that Crystal had sent to congratulate them. And given what was about to happen, the timing of the reconciliation could
not have been better. I want to tell you about a show I love, True or Crime from Cilicia Stanton.
My favorite true crime shows
are the ones where I feel like the creator has a real stake in what they're talking about,
and this is definitely the case with Cilicia, who got interested in covering crime because,
like many of us in this genre, she experienced it. In each episode of the show, Cilicia brings
a personal, deeply insightful lens to the crime that she covers, whether it's a famous case like
the Manson murders or Jonestown, or a lesser known case that needs to be heard, like the story of a
modern lynching. She covers these stories with a fresh and thoughtful lens, helping listeners
understand not just the case itself, but why it matters to our understanding of the world.
Her long-awaited second season is airing now, and the first season is ready to binge,
so go check out True or Crime with Cilicia Stanton wherever you get your podcasts.
If you've been listening to this show for a while, you know that I have very strong feelings about what is and is not responsible true crime content.
Maybe you've heard me make some pointed comments about the producers of a certain film, or perhaps you've heard one of my dozen or so rants about a certain journalist whose name rhymes with Schmeichel
Schmeichel and Bach. And if you've been with me for a while, you'll also know that getting Nobody
Should Believe Me on the air was quite the roller coaster. Podcasting is just the wild west, y'all.
And these experiences are what led me to launch my new network, True Story Media,
where we are all about uplifting true crime creators doing the work and making thoughtful,
survivor-centric shows. And I could not be more thrilled to announce our very first creator
partner, You Probably Think This Story's About You. The first season of this enthralling show
from breakout creator Brittany Ard took podcasting by storm in 2024.
Zooming to the number one spot in the charts on Apple and Spotify,
as Brittany revealed the captivating story of a romantic deception that upended her life
and traced the roots of her own complicated personal history that led her there.
Brittany is back in 2025 with brand new episodes,
this time helping others tell their
own stories of betrayal, heartache, and resilience. If you love Nobody Should Believe Me, I think you
will also love You Probably Think This Story's About You for its themes of deception, complex
family intrigue, and its raw, vulnerable storytelling. You can binge the full first
season and listen to brand new episodes each week by following the show on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can also find it at the link in our show notes.
So here's where I pull back the curtain a bit and tell you how we had planned to structure the arc of this season.
I had this all in my head at the beginning. We would start off with this
dramatic moment of Joe at Donna's deathbed, only to reveal that Donna had survived and that the
deathbed was just another illusion. Another example of how you can't even believe your own
eyes when it comes to someone like her. I saw this ending on a triumphant note. Joe thriving,
moving forward in their new job and their new life.
And we would sit down with Joe and have a conversation about what justice looked like for someone like their mom
and how they planned to navigate the most complicated relationship of their life going forward.
But in the spring, just as we were getting into the meat of making this season, something happened.
I was just living my life. I was five days from graduating and walking across the stage with my
cohort. I was about to move into a new apartment where I was going to get to have an office and
all this great stuff. Me and my roommate just got a cat. Just a lot of
really, really good things. I just started a full-time job with an organization that I love.
And then on April 26th, I was actually in orientation for that new job with all of my new co-workers and I got a phone call from my sister like we only call each
other if something's wrong with mom something's happening with mom um so when I got this call
I knew something was not right of course um and I ran out of the room, and I answered the phone, and my sister said that
she's gone.
In April of 2024, Donna was found dead in her home at the age of 62. After decades of alternately playing
Russian roulette and or make-believe with her health, this time there was no side of hand.
Donna was gone. Joe and I talked on the phone right after it happened, and the news honestly
shocked me. Donna's smoking, alcoholism, and general disregard for her health,
despite her obsession with it, made death at a young age more likely than not. But still,
I was just kind of in disbelief. In my imagination, after hearing Joe talk about her for all of these
years, Donna had begun to seem kind of unkillable, like she would just go on having crisis after
crisis for decades to come. Donna was never as frail as she appeared, but in the end,
all humans are fragile, and Donna's body finally succumbed. I find it hard, even months later,
to articulate how I feel about Donna's death, both as Joe's friend and as the person they've trusted
to help tell their story on this show.
I don't feel sorry she's gone.
It would be disingenuous of me to say that I did.
But I feel sad at the way that she went.
No matter what she did in this life,
she was still a person.
And to die alone on the floor of a filthy apartment
is a horrible end.
Mostly, I feel sad for what Joe has to go through because I knew this was going to hit them hard. Also, I feel pissed at Donna.
It just feels so fitting that Donna would take one last opportunity to screw up Joe's life.
That just as they were about to walk in their graduation, starting a new job, taking all these big steps forward,
it feels like Donna took one last big swipe at Joe.
There's no indication that Donna's death was intentional,
unless you count the decades of abuse she put her body through,
but I couldn't help feeling like she'd done it on purpose.
And I'm mad about
that. This was also unsettling for me because, as you'll know if you're a longtime listener,
this isn't the first time a perpetrator has died during production. Brittany Phillips died of an
apparent overdose at age 38 while I was making season two. So if one death is a coincidence
and three is a trend, then two is somewhere in between those two things.
Just spooky.
Joe and I kept in close touch in the days following Donna's death.
And they did a location share on their phone so that I could track their progress on the way back to their hometown.
And I followed the little green glowing dot on the map long into the night.
But I hopped in the car at like 5 p.m. and drove straight to Minnesota. How long had it been since you'd talked to your mom before this April?
The last time I spoke with my mom was,
I believe it was on her birthday, November 10th.
I think I might have talked to her one other time on the phone,
but that's like very fuzzy.
Like I don't really remember that the last conversation I remember
is um I texted her happy birthday and then she had like texted me saying how she knew I was coming
to Minnesota because I was actually in Minnesota at that time for a Kesha concert
um and she had texted me saying how she wanted to see me, how she's just my mother is all.
And I had said like I couldn't see her.
And she was like, I guess I'll have to wait.
And it was like a really weird text conversation.
But that was the last time that we spoke.
We talked the day you found out. And to say the timing of it felt strange, I think, is like an understatement.
It felt like a big plot twist, to say the least.
And, you know, here we'd been sort of has had all of these brushes with death or supposed brushes with death.
We're never sure which one.
And that initial shock must have been really extreme and sort of that I'd imagine there was just like a lot of disbelief.
So a week prior, actually, I had gotten a phone call from Hutchinson. And whenever I get calls from Hutchinson, I always am terrified that my mom's dead. I never really realized how much my fear of my mom's death has been a daily thing that I've struggled with my whole life. It's always seemed like it would be the worst possible thing that could ever
happen in the world. Yeah. It used to be like I would hear a thunderstorm and I would call my mom
until she answered because I would think she was dead. Or I'd hear a siren and I'd call my mom
until she answered because I think she was dead and things like that. And it's gotten a little
bit better, but I still always like I'll see a spider and be convinced that it's a sign
that my mom's dead. So yeah, what is actually the connection between like thunderstorms or sirens?
Is it just kind of anything that makes you feel alarmed? Do you think it's like a sign or you
like, is it triggering some memory that you know of or what's the connection there?
Definitely a memory. When I was younger, my mom said she was going to the grocery store.
And I had to have been pretty young, under the age of 10. And she left, and then there was a
really bad thunderstorm. And I've always been kind of afraid of storms, but my brain has also always
been just spirals. So I was convinced that she was dead because it was hours that she was at
the grocery store that was a block away.
So I started trying to call her and call her and call her and call her and she didn't answer.
And then when she got home, she yelled at me for calling her so much and for being scared.
But ever since then, anytime that I would hear thunder, I would repeat that same thing. It started to get a little bit better
or sometimes I'd like star six, seven call at least. Cause I knew that like I needed her voice,
but I knew I didn't want her to know it was me. And then that's the same with sirens. Um, when I
was a, I mean, obviously hospitals were like really big and always a thing. But when I was a teenager,
my mom was supposed to be coming to pick me and my friends
up from my dad's house and um I got a call from the paramedics that my mom had been in a bad car
accident um and then we like drove past and you could hear the sirens and like see her car and
everything um so I think that that's like more whatever what I
think of when I think of the sirens but also there's always ambulances and stuff around our
place too but so a week before my mom passed um I had gotten a call from Hutchinson and I was really
scared and I answered the phone and it was the Hutch Hospital and it was a nurse
calling and she asked if I could come and pick my mother up. I live in St. Louis like no I cannot
and then she so then I like called my sister and like talked to her and none of us nobody knew she
was in the hospital nobody knew why nobody like, what was going on or anything.
So you arrive there, you go and see your mom at the funeral home,
and then you connect with Crystal at some point while you're there?
Yeah, we texted the whole time.
I think that we both needed a few days to just kind of like breathe a little bit.
And, you know, we had to figure out the funeral stuff on our own.
And I think my sister obviously still sees her as like the older sister.
So I think she didn't want to put stuff on me or didn't want to like ask for help
or things like that so she tried to take on as much as she could with the funeral stuff. I would
have to like no let me help. We're sisters like we're in this together. We met up for the funeral
home thing. It was me, my sister, Tyler, her husband, and my grandma. I like can't get the images out of my head.
I'm in my 40s, and a number of my closest friends have lost parents over the last few years.
It's always hard. Even if the death was following a lung illness, it still feels like an unbelievable
shock, and it's hard to accept that they're gone. My parents are,
mercifully, in very good health, but they're also in their 70s. It's a time of life when you have
to accept that it could happen, even as it still feels way too soon to even contemplate. I'm
terrified of my parents' death, as I think many of us are, but it's especially hard because I know
that I'll have to face it alone without Megan,
which, even though it's been 14 years since I've spoken to her, still hits me.
And I also think about it with my niece and nephew.
What if they never get the chance to meet my parents?
What if there's no opportunity to make up for lost time?
What if that time is just lost?
I will definitely be wrecked when I lose my parents. However, I will have had a long, close, loving relationship with
them. There will be grief, but there won't be unfinished business. There won't be that other
kind of loss, the loss of the chance to make things right. Because nothing needs to be
made right between me and my parents. I could not have asked for more of them.
That's not a privilege everyone gets, and it's certainly not one Joe had.
All of the complicated feelings Joe had about Donna, all of the dueling versions of her that
lived in their mind, the conflicted and unreliable memories. When Donna
died, those came roaring back. I know that none of these memories are even real, but all I keep
seeing over and over and over in my head all day, every day, is my mom smiling and laughing and when she was healthy and it's like this idealized like
good mom and I know that she wasn't that 99.9% of the time but that's like all the memories I have It just hurts so much imagining her gone.
I just want my mom.
Next time, we explore the complicated process of grieving a parent,
especially one who made your life hell.
The abuser depends on the
abuser to get their needs met. And so when you are a tiny, spongy computer and you are developing
under this dependence, you learn also to depend on your abuser.
Nobody Should Believe Me is written, hosted, and produced by me, Andrea Delmop.
Our senior producer and editor is Mariah Gossett.
Greta Stromquist is our associate producer.
Engineering by Robin Edgar.
And administrative support from Nola Karmush.
Music provided by Johnny Nicholson and Joel Shupak. With additional music and sounds from SoundSnap. very strong feelings about what is and is not responsible true crime content. Maybe you've
heard me make some pointed comments about the producers of a certain film, or perhaps you've
heard one of my dozen or so rants about a certain journalist whose name rhymes with Schmeichel
Schmeichel and Bog. And if you've been with me for a while, you'll also know that getting Nobody
Should Believe Me on the air was quite the roller coaster. Podcasting is just the wild west,
y'all. And these experiences are what led me to launch my new network, True Story Media,
where we are all about uplifting true crime creators, doing the work, and making thoughtful,
survivor-centric shows. And I could not be more thrilled to announce our very first creator
partner, You Probably Think This Story's About
You. The first season of this enthralling show from breakout creator Brittany Ard took podcasting
by storm in 2024. Zooming to the number one spot in the charts on Apple and Spotify as Brittany
revealed the captivating story of a romantic deception that upended her life and traced the
roots of her own complicated personal history that led her
there. Brittany is back in 2025 with brand new episodes, this time helping others tell their
own stories of betrayal, heartache, and resilience. If you love Nobody Should Believe Me, I think you
will also love You Probably Think This Story's About You for its themes of deception, complex
family intrigue, and its raw, vulnerable storytelling.
You can binge the full first season and listen to brand new episodes each week by following the show
on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also find it at the link in
our show notes.