Wednesday, 21 November 2012

  • What To Expect When You're Grieving

    Dear friends recently lost their dad. I remember being surprised after my dad died at how bone tired I was. As one acquainted with grief, I offer this short primer, not as a scientific study, but as an anecdotal narrative of what I've experienced, what I've observed and what you may expect.

    1. Exhaustion   
    Emotional work is physically exhausting. You will wake up tired, your sleep patterns will be disrupted, a deep weariness settles in. Make allowances for being tired; avoid extra responsibilities if you can. Take a nap without apologizing for it.

    2. Disorientation    
    Your brain is overwhelmed with thoughts and feelings. It is hard to focus. You repeat yourself in conversations. You begin a sentence, but can't finish it. Fog is everywhere. Your ability to think sequentially is diminished. Basic decisions—where to eat, what to do next—are challenging.

    3. Absorption
    When someone you love dies, you look for clues, for signs, for anything that can help you make sense of his/her life. Or make sense of his/her death. You examine the relationship you shared, reviewing communications, reminding yourself of what is true. The more contradictions there are, the more you ponder. We want to understand, but the understanding doesn't always come.  

    4. Apathy
    You couldn't care less.  You stop eating. Or you can't stop eating. Personal hygiene slips. You are tempted to veg-out with TV, computer games, mindless occupations. Habits help. Brush your teeth, take a walk. 

    5. Isolation
    Grief is a lonely thing. After the outpouring of your friends' comfort and compassion, life for them returns to normal. But your life is unalterably changed. Grief makes people uncomfortable, unsure of their response, so they may avoid you in an effort to protect themselves. You may be reluctant to articulate your grief to yourself, let alone to others. Living in community can propel you into social situations that insulate you from isolation. 

    There is no getting around the fact that grief is painful. We don't like pain, so we search for shortcuts that will make the pain go away. I've seen folks allot 4-7 days to grieve and then pack up their grief and put it into storage. But grief too quickly stowed will return, ringing the doorbell, insisting on being present. 

    How long will this last? Ecclesiastes 3 gives a clue: To everything there is a season, a time to every purpose under heaven. (emphasis mine) Three months is a normal time to experience the deep initial wave of grief. The loss will be with you until the end of your days; you will never be "over it."

    And then there will be a moment of realization that—for a moment—you had forgotten how sad you were. It feels like betrayal to experience a slice of joy.

    Another moment will come when you feel like you should be sad, but the emotion is just not there. Then you make a decision to either manufacture the sadness or to let that moment pass. There is a ditch on both sides of the road: the ditch of denying grief, pretending you are fine; and the ditch of gripping grief with clenched hands that won't release it.  When the tears come, let them. But don't force them.

    The summer after my mom died, I remember a moment of social awkwardness and resulting tears at a summer camp. Some girl impatiently demanded to know why I was crying. I was too embarrassed to articulate my awkwardness, so I played my trump card: "Well, wouldn't you cry if your mom had died?" It was patently dishonest, and my ten-year-old self recognized—and regretted—the manipulation the moment those words left my mouth.

    Underneath all of these thoughts is my faith that God is sovereign, that He knows my tears, and that I can trust Him. He doesn't erase the pain as we walk through the valley of the shadow of death, but He does promise to comfort us. And that is enough.

    When have you been through the grieving process?  What did you experience?  What encouragement can you give to others who face the loss of a loved one today?

Comments (3)

  • Tracy_tragedy@xanga

    If anyone tries to make you feel like shit after they think it's 'been enough time' , punch them .
    The grieving process has no time limit . It's your own process that has to take place .

  • SheilaJoyce

    Excellent sharing !

    Lost my Dad in 72, my Mom in 03 then my beloved hubby in 07...& it's been one day at a time, only rapid/ successful because of HIS amazing grace, love & constant abidance with me...topped of course, with the immense, undiminishing utter joy of our soon coming Rapture...remembering that all this right NOW, is temporary, nothing more, nothing less...

    Many thanks indeed !

  • Pollypinks@xanga

    Sheila, for going through the process of losing your family members I'm so sorry.  The timeline of natural events has us burying our parents, yet you also lost your husband.  Getting through that must indeed be difficult, and my hat's off to you for sharing.  I was 27 when I lost my mom, and we'd had a very emotionally distant relationship all my life.  At long last we were beginning to discuss issues, at least I was, and I felt cheated, not just because of that, but  because my children would have no grandmother.  The other grandmother was states away, and emotionally distant as well, as she was angry with me for not converting to Jehovah's Witnesses, as she had done.  I don't think I processed mom's death for many years, so yes, for those who say it takes time, it certainly does, but it never ends.

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