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Some
bereaved parents have described it this way:
- I
feel like I repeatedly, without warning, go on the wildest amusement
ride the world has ever seen. The force takes us up, down, and
tears us inside out. We get thrown sideways and experience sudden
drops much greater than free fall. We spin at record speed mentally
and internally, without ever lifting our feet off the ground.
The ride is the fiercest, most frightening experience one could
ever suffer through. Cindy P., Her daughter Nicole was
twenty-four when she died on October 3, 1999.
- When
my daughter Hannah died of cancer, one month before her fourth
birthday, I felt as though I had passed through an invisible
fold in the universe and landed in some altered state of reality.
Nothing was the same, and yet everything was painfully unchanged.
Naomi N.
- Nita A.
whose sons Erik, 27, and David, 25, died in a freak car accident
on Thanksgiving Day, 1994, compares her severe and intense grief
to retching on an empty stomach after a bout with the stomach
flu: Emotional pain could, perhaps, be symbolized by the
unrelenting ripping and repeated retching of my devastated soul
trying to separate itself from the rest of me. The intensity
level of these unyielding cries, erupting from the depth of
my being, captured my souls agony. The emotional pain
was of a depth, breadth, and scope that I never could have imagined.
The grief
journey is a very long, gradual and difficult process. We are
The Compassionate Friends. You need not walk alone.
Some
common elements of the grief experience are:
Shock,
numbness, disbelief: This denial is protective, allows us
to do what must be done and to gather our inner resources. It
is not unusual for it to be weeks or months before the reality
sinks in with an intensity of pain and sorrow that takes the bereaved
parent by surprise. Others may be at the point of expecting us
to move on. This can increase our sense of isolation.
Pain and
sadness: Grief reaches the heart. It impacts our entire being.
We may feel physically, emotionally and spiritually exhausted
with barely enough energy to breathe. Our grief may be characterized
by pining, yearning, searching, a longing for our childs
physical presence and a feeling of overwhelming emptiness. We
may feel powerless, helpless and out of control. We may experience
physical complaints, emotional swings, thinking disturbances,
spiritual struggles, changes in behavior and feelings of going
crazy.
- I
seemed to be a bundle of confusing, scattered emotions that
varied hourly. Kelly O.
Anger,
fear and guilt: We may be angry at God, ourselves, the doctors
or even our child who has died. We may feel isolated, lonely or
misunderstood. We may fear the sudden death of our other children
or loved ones. We may fear being alone or being with others. We
may feel guilt arising from feelings of failure, anger or relief.
Accept the painful thoughts, feelings and behaviors. Most times
we cant explain a particular feeling, and why it is a feeling
now, but we can recognize them, affirm them, experience them and
release them. Buried pain is very real, has energy, doesnt
go away on its own and emerges when we least expect it.
Resolution,
acceptance and reinvestment in life: We dont get
over but acknowledge the irreplaceable loss of our child
and try to live each day as best as we can. Life will be different
as we learn to cope, but still have meaning.
- We will
always be bereaved parents, but we will not always be experiencing
the pangs of grief. Like arthritis, we learn to live with our
losses the rest of our lives, and also realize that well
still have flare-ups of pain and discomfort as we move on through
the years. Mitch C., Mitchs son Kelly died seventeen
years ago.
- I know
I will never get OVER it, nor do I want to, but I will get through
it. Ten years later I can now say, Why not me? I
am not better than others. Every day some family suffers tragedy,
loss of life gone too soon. LaVon H., Her twenty-one-year-old
son Mark died from suicide.
- Gradually,
the cold darkness of grief begins to give way to the warmth
of memories, acceptance, purpose, and reinvestment in life.
Carole D., The Compassionate Friends
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