The Grieving Channel: To understand, perfect and expand the
grieving process.
In
the years of my journey as a therapist and bereaved parent I have noticed
several important recurring themes.
The first and most important one is the unending pressure to not
grieve. It is truly amazing at how
little time people are given to recover from one of the biggest upheavals in
adult life, the death of a child.
But that pressure isn’t limited to bereaved parents, it is also true for
widows/widowers and down the line to everything else that might demand a tear
or two be shed. It is truly
astonishing.
The
second recurring theme in working with people for over thirty years is that
after all is said and done, the root problem is most often some unprocessed
loss. I love all the “Oh by the
way, my dad died when I was 3, do you think that matters? It was so long ago it probably isn’t
important”
That
is the third recurring theme, the complete discounting and dismissal of the
wounds we carry for most of our lives.
The
fourth theme is constant comment about “shouldn’t you be over it by now? Time to get on with life. You are a downer to be
around (yes, the death of a loved one is a real downer)
This
constant preaching about when to be done is both external and internal We learn
that to be sad is a” pity party” or “oh you are just feeling sorry for
yourself”, “man up”, anything to stop the process, Grieving changes people too
much.
I
have come to think/feel that what we need is a safe place for people to grieve,
scream and howl and sob as long as is needed.
That
brings me to another recurring theme; those that insist on grieving actually do
heal.
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