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Sister Wives star Janelle Brown, 55, gets emotional about the death of her son Garrison, 25, six months ago

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Sister Wives star Janelle Brown shared an emotional tribute to her late son Garrison Brown.

The post, which marks six months since his death by suicide at age 25, left his mother reflecting on life without him.

'6 months ago today you went away. You come up in my photo memories almost every day. Sometimes it doesn't seem like you're gone,' the 55-year-old wrote in her caption. 

'And then I remember I won't be getting a call or text from you and it all comes rushing back.'

It's been six months of firsts for the TLC star since her son was found dead in his home in Flagstaff, Arizona in March.

Sister Wives' Janelle Brown shared an emotional tribute to her late son Garrison Brown

The post, which marks six months since his death by suicide, left his mother reflecting on life without him

She concluded, 'I know you fought hard but in the end you just couldn't stay. I love you so much and will see you again when my journey is done.'

The comments section was filled with messages of support and fan sharing their heartbreak over losing loved ones to suicide. 

'Thank you for not asking him why. Just that it's ok that he needed to leave. Acceptance. Love. Respect,' one fan wrote. 

'"I know you fought hard but in the end you just couldn’t stay." This got me. Even through the immense amount of pain, there’s no judgement. You’re an incredible, loving mom. He knew that, so do the rest of your children,' another fan commented.

Her fans are in her corner, letting her know they pray for her.

'My son will be gone 4 years tomorrow. I’ve prayed for you and your family. It’s a tough road but God is good,' someone else shared. 

A fourth person wrote, 'I can’t imagine what you are going through and living through daily but I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again, he was incredibly lucky to have you ❤️.'

Earlier this summer, Janelle's former sister wife Meri Brown shared that there's been 'good days and bad days' for the grieving parents.

'I just feel so much for Janelle — I watched my mom lose two of her own kids before she passed. It's tragic,' she shared on the Miss Understood podcast in June.

'I think there's good days and bad days, I don't know how there couldn't be,' she went on.

'6 months ago today you went away. You come up in my photo memories almost every day

Sometimes it doesn't seem like you're gone,' her caption began. 'And then I remember I won't be getting a call or text from you and it all comes rushing back'

'There's still times where I'll see a picture of Garrison and I'm like, "Oh, I don't like that this happened. It's really sad.'

Meri explained that grief is 'different for every situation.'

'You really have to do what you need to do at the moment. Embrace the pain, cry when you need to, spend time alone and when you're feeling ok, get up and take a walk.'

Meri also stressed that grief is not a linear process.

'I think a lot of times people have a box that we think we should live in. Grief, it's not linear — it's not a checklist. It's all the emotions all the time and whenever they decide to pop up.'

It's been six months of firsts for the TLC star since her son was found dead in his home in Flagstaff, Arizona in March

She concluded, 'I know you fought hard but in the end you just couldn't stay. I love you so much and will see you again when my journey is done'

Garrison passed on March 5 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, and he was laid to rest a week later

She added that though life will eventually get better, the love for the person who is gone cannot be replaced.

'I think that a lot of people will say, "You're gonna move past it, you're gonna move through it." And you will, but I think that there's this hole that is created and people will say that hole will fill up, but the hole will always be there.'

Garrison passed on March 5 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, and he was laid to rest a week later.

Ethanol intoxication was listed as a contributing factor as Garrison's blood alcohol level was more than 3 times the legal limit — which is .08% in the United States — at the time of his death.

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