(Personal Essay)
I see my old self in you. The sadness. The constant worry about the
future. The unending need to prove to yourself that you can take care
of yourself. That you are going to be okay. Let me tell you this
now. I am using all caps for emphasis. Not because I’m yelling.
YOU ARE GOING TO BE
OKAY.
You will. It doesn’t
feel like it but you will. I have learned a lot over the last decade.
Let me share with you what I’ve learned so your journey is easier.
You are surrounded
by people who love you. That voice inside your head telling you how
alone you are is lying. If you can’t see it then every day
I want you to find one person that you know loves you and has your
back. Each day look for a new person to add to the list. Write the
list down and put it in a drawer or a box. Something that is hidden
but close at hand. On the bad days take it out and read the list. Out
loud. Remember these are the people who are there for you. They are
also the ones who would miss you if you were gone.
There are stages of
grief but you don’t go through them in any set order. It’s not
like checking things off of a list. You don’t wake up one morning
feel acceptance and bam! you’re done. You are going to move through
the stages. In and out. Over and over for a long time. You may feel
several in one day. You will have emotional days. Days full of
difficult things that drain your energy and make you wish for simpler
times.
There will be days
that almost feel normal except when you remember that he or she is
gone.
Some days will be
sweet, happy, and spread out before you like buttercream over cake.
Then you will feel guilty that you had that day because you aren’t
supposed to have good times without him. The truth is
that you are. You are supposed to have the good times, the funny
times, and the crazy times. He loved you. He wouldn’t want you
to die with his passing.
I spent a long time
convinced that crying was showing weakness. Crying is not weakness in
grief it is a testament to how much you loved. Something so beautiful
cannot possibly be weak.
I can hear Dad now.
“Have appropriate sadness because I was fuckin’ great. Keep
going.”
I hear you Dad. I’m
listening.
Keep going. Keep
resting. You will start healing. Slowly it will get better.
Try not to make the same mistakes that I made. I realized this morning that I grieved for my
late husband like he grieved for his wife from a previous marriage.
He never let go of his grief. She was always in the forefront long
after we were together.
After I had accepted
losing him, grieving had become such a big part of my life that I
kept grieving. For other things. Failed attempts at change, mistakes,
perceived losses. A decade came and went and I was still grieving.
Don’t do that. It does not make for a happy life.
As things change, as
you learn to live in this new life you are building let yourself
become uncomfortable again as you move away from the hurting. Don’t
let living in grief become the forefront of your life. Don’t let it
stay forever. Live with it not for it.
Don’t be afraid to
change. To build something new. Be happy. Find joy again. Laugh all
you want.
The events that took
him from you are just a blip of the time that you had together.
Remember all of it. It was beautiful.
Changing everything
right away does not make the grieving process go faster. Just more
complicated.
Loss of a loved one
is a difficult journey. You can get through this. You will get
through this.
Love yourself, trust
your own instincts about change, if something feels like it has to be
done right now you may be rushing things, take a step back and
proceed a bit more slowly. You’ve got this. You really do.
2 comments:
Thank you very much. I'm going to share this on Facebook and Twitter.
@C.S. Jennings It was my pleasure. {HUG}
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