The many lessons of grief include a better understanding of loss, transitions, and changes, as well as a heightened appreciation of love, family, and friends. Grief is painful, but usually brings an opportunity to experience the feelings that come with being human. It is a chance to appreciate life, because if we don’t reach the heights of love, sharing, relationships, caring (the list goes on) how could we ever reach the painful depths of life – the loss of those peak experiences of life. of things and those we love.
Like most of life, you must let yourself feel it, sense it, experience it. Without the true highs then there could not be the depths of lows. The highs and lows are all part of it. They depend on each other.
Grief is a part of life, with many theories for dealing with it. Included are:
Kubler Ross’s 5 stages of grief –denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance
Rando’s 6 Rs for processing mourning – recognize the loss, react to the separation, recollect and re-experience (the deceased), relinquish old attachments, readjust (to a new world), reinvest (emotional energy)
Bowlby’s 4 stages of grief – shock and numbness, yearning and searching, despair and disorganization, reorganization and recovery
Warden’s 4 tasks of mourning – accept the reality of the loss, work through the pain of grief, adjust to an environment where the deceased is missing, find an enduring connection with the deceased while embarking on a new life
Eric Lindermann’s 3 steps to recovery – emancipation from bondage to the deceased, readjustment to a new environment in which the deceased is missing, formation of new relationships
Klass, Silverman, and Nickman’s continuing bonds theory – suggests that rather than assuming detachment as a normal grief response, consider creating a new relationship with the deceased. This does not mean one is not grieving in a normal and healthy way, but that grief can include having ties to loved ones where one finds ways to adjust and redefine the relationship with that person.
Things to remember as you deal with grief include:
Grief is unique for each person
Stages are not linear
Not everyone goes through stages in a prescribed order
Path is more like a labyrinth, not a tunnel
Stages are just tools
Steps may repeat
There is no endpoint
C.S.Lewis – Feeling, and feelings, and feelings. Let me try thinking instead.
– It doesn’t really matter whether you grip the arms of the dentist chair or let your hands lie ii your lap. The drill drills on.
-Grief is like a long valley, a winding valley where any bend may reveal a totally new landscape.
So glad that I was able to access your blog today. I usually get an error message so it was a blessing this morning to actually get your post. I suspect you wrote this message after your wife died. I know our culture doesn’t seem to encourage us to go through the grief process. I experienced a lot of loss during 2020 (although nothing like yours) and finally chanced upon “The Grief Recovery Handbook” by John James and Russell Friedman. I found it very helpful.
It is always such a pleasure to connect with you through your blog or through LBH. I hope you are well and glad that whatever changed that allowed me to access your writing here, happened.