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by Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.
The death of someone loved changes our lives forever. And the movement
from the "before" to the "after" is almost always
a long, painful journey. From my own experiences with loss as well
as those of the thousands of grieving people I have worked with
over the years, I have learned that if we are to heal we cannot
skirt the outside edges of our grief. Instead, we must journey all
through it, sometimes meandering the side roads, sometimes plowing
directly into its raw center.
I have also learned that the journey requires mourning. There is
an important difference, you see. Grief is what you think and feel
on the inside after someone you love dies. Mourning is the outward
expression of those thoughts and feelings. To mourn is to be an
active participant in our grief journeys. We all grieve when someone
we love dies, but if we are to heal, we must also mourn.
There are six "yield signs" you are likely to encounter
on your journey through grief-what I call the "reconciliation
needs of mourning." For while your grief journey will be an
intensely personal, unique experience, all mourners must yield to
this set of basic human needs if they are to heal.
Need 1. Acknowledging the reality of
the death.
This first need of mourning involves gently confronting the reality
that someone you care about will never physically come back into
your life again.
Whether the death was sudden or anticipated, acknowledging the
full reality of the loss may occur over weeks and months. To survive,
you may try to push away the reality of the death at times. You
may discover yourself replaying events surrounding the death and
confronting memories, both good and bad. This replay is a vital
part of this need of mourning. It's as if each time you talk it
out, the event is a little more real.
Remember-this first need of mourning, like the other five that
follow, may intermittently require your attention for months. Be
patient and compassionate with yourself as you work on each of them.
Need 2. Embracing the pain of the loss.
This need of mourning requires us to embrace the pain of our loss-something
we naturally don't want to do. It is easier to avoid, repress or
deny the pain of grief than it is to confront it, yet it is in confronting
our pain that we learn to reconcile ourselves to it.
You will probably discover that you need to "dose" yourself
in embracing your pain. In other words, you cannot (nor should you
try to) overload yourself with the hurt all at one time. Sometimes
you may need to distract yourself from the pain of death, while
at other times you will need to create a safe place to move toward
it.
Unfortunately, our culture tends to encourage the denial of pain.
If you openly express your feelings of grief, misinformed friends
may advise you to "carry on" or "keep your chin up."
If, on the other hand, you remain "strong" and "in
control," you may be congratulated for "doing well"
with your grief. Actually, doing well with your grief means becoming
well acquainted with your pain.
Need 3. Remembering the person who died.
Do you have any kind of relationship with someone when they die?
Of course. You have a relationship of memory. Precious memories,
dreams reflecting the significance of the relationship and objects
that link you to the person who died (such as photos, souvenirs
etc.) are examples of some of the things that give testimony to
a different form of a continued relationship. This need of mourning
involves allowing and encouraging yourself to pursue this relationship.
But some people may try to take your memories away. Trying to be
helpful, they encourage you to take down all the photos of the person
who died. They tell you to keep busy or even to move out of your
house. But in my experience, remembering the past makes hoping for
the future possible. Your future will become open to new experiences
only to the extent that you embrace the past.
Need 4. Developing a new self-identity.
Part of your self-identity comes from the relationships you have
with other people. When someone with whom you have a relationship
dies, your self-identity, or the way you see yourself, naturally
changes.
You may have gone from being a "wife" or "husband"
to a "widow" or "widower." You may have gone
from being a "parent" to a "bereaved parent."
The way you define yourself and the way society defines you is changed.
A death often requires you to take on new roles that had been filled
by the person who died. After all, someone still has to take out
the garbage, someone still has to buy the groceries. You confront
your changed identity every time you do something that used to be
done by the person who died. This can be very hard work and can
leave you feeling very drained.
You may occasionally feel child-like as you struggle with your
changing identity. You may feel a temporarily heightened dependence
on others as well as feelings of helplessness, frustration, inadequacy
and fear.
Many people discover that as they work on this need, they ultimately
discover some positive aspects of their changed self-identity. You
may develop a renewed confidence in yourself, for example. You may
develop a more caring, kind and sensitive part of yourself. You
may develop an assertive part of your identity that empowers you
to go on living even though you continue to feel a sense of loss.
Need 5. Searching for meaning.
When someone you love dies, you naturally question the meaning
and purpose of life. You probably will question your philosophy
of life and explore religious and spiritual values as you work on
this need. You may discover yourself searching for meaning in your
continued living as you ask "How?" and "Why"
questions.
"How could God let this happen?" "Why did this happen
now, in this way?" The death reminds you of your lack of control.
It can leave you feeling powerless.
The person who died was a part of you. This death means you mourn
a loss not only outside of yourself, but inside of yourself as well.
At times, overwhelming sadness and loneliness may be your constant
companions. You may feel that when this person died, part of you
died with him or her. And now you are faced with finding some meaning
in going on with your life even though you may often feel so empty.
This death also calls for you to confront your own spirituality.
You may doubt your faith and have spiritual conflicts and questions
racing through your head and heart. This is normal and part of your
journey toward renewed living.
Need 6. Receiving ongoing support from
others.
The quality and quantity of understanding support you get during
your grief journey will have a major influence on your capacity
to heal. You cannot-nor should you try to-do this alone. Drawing
on the experiences and encouragement of friends, fellow mourners
or professional counselors is not a weakness but a healthy human
need. And because mourning is a process that takes place over time,
this support must be available months and even years after the death
of someone in your life.
Unfortunately, because our society places so much value on the
ability to "carry on," "keep your chin up" and
"keep busy," many mourners are abandoned shortly after
the event of the death. "It's over and done with" and
"It's time to get on with your life" are the types of
messages directed at mourners that still dominate. Obviously, these
messages encourage you to deny or repress your grief rather than
express it.
To be truly helpful, the people in your support system must appreciate
the impact this death has had on you. They must understand that
in order to heal, you must be allowed-even encouraged-to mourn long
after the death. And they must encourage you to see mourning not
as an enemy to be vanquished but as a necessity to be experienced
as a result of having loved.
Reconciling your grief
You may have heard-indeed you may believe-that your grief journey's
end will come when you resolve, or recover from, your grief. But
your journey will never end. People do not "get over"
grief.
Reconciliation is a term I find more appropriate for what occurs
as the mourner works to integrate the new reality of moving forward
in life without the physical presence of the person who died. With
reconciliation comes a renewed sense of energy and confidence, an
ability to fully acknowledge the reality of the death and a capacity
to become re-involved in the activities of living.
In reconciliation, the sharp, ever-present pain of grief gives
rise to a renewed sense of meaning and purpose. Your feeling of
loss will not completely disappear, yet they will soften, and the
intense pangs of grief will become less frequent. Hope for a continued
life will emerge as you are able to make commitments to the future,
realizing that the person who died will never be forgotten, yet
knowing that your life can and will move forward.
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Kara is the Gothic root of the word "care."
It means to reach out, to care, to lament, to grieve with.
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