Sunday, August 4, 2013

Being When Others Grieve



We have ALL experienced loss in life, in fact research suggests there are more than 43, yes 43 things we can experience as a loss. What we know is that no two people who experience the same loss, experience it the same.  No loss is greater than the next.  We all experience our pain at 100%!  (A few of the 43 losses, a pet, a friend, a parent, a spouse, fertility issues, adoption, a job, a divorce, birth, a hearbreaking break up, a child).  

That's right, We ALL EXPERIENCE EACH LOSS at 100%.

To say to someone, "I know how you feel because I lost....." is not comforting.  You do not know someone else's pain.  You just do not.  Grief is defined as the normal and natural reaction to loss of any kind. Being with someone who is grieving is HARD, AWKWARD, and UNCOMFORTABLE. These feelings do not reflect negatively on you, feelings are neither right nor wrong, they just are.  What reflects in a less than honorable light is what we do with those feelings.  When those feelings, about you, overtake your ability to BE about others. The power of BEING with someone who is grieving is not measurable.  I would like to suggest it is one of the biggest gifts you can offer to one who is sinking in pain that words can not adequately describe.

Grief is a process, no timeline, no stages, and there is no way of getting around it.  It is a process and no matter how hard you try to avoid, pretend, or portray, it is there.  Right there waiting!  Birthdays, anniversaries, traumaversaries,  smells, songs, sights, places, people, things you would never think of that bring that grief raging to the surface to be addressed.  Grief knows no social class, time or place, in fact it knows no etiquette. It rises up at the mall, work, home, school, and church.  It looks different for everyone, behaviors (from kids to adults) crying, sobbing, withdrawing, moodiness, forgetfulness, inability to concentrate, looks like depression and ADHD, and more.

In the western world, on average people get 6 weeks for surgery, days and weeks for a broken bone, but for a shattered heart that can not be seen, we get three days.  Three days for the death of someone we can prove is close enough in our blood line. Zero days for all other losses.  This is telling of how grief is perceived and viewed and directly impacts the way we deal as a a society, as communities, as churches, as families and friends.  You know that awkward, hard, awkward, uncomfortable feeling you get when you are "with" someone who has experienced a loss,think back, who taught you how to grieve? How old were you?  

Have you heard time heals all pain (grief just takes time), if you are going to cry, go to your room (be alone), we will get another one when a pet died or a bike was stolen(replace the loss), or what about be strong for mother, brother, wife, husband, father, sibling, etc (your pain is less or not as important or feeling is pain is weak) OR stay busy and don't think about it (like if you don't think about it its not REAL or there).  Don't feel bad you did all you could (like you had the power to change the outcome).  These are the 6 most common myths we learn as children.  Amazingly enough our brains were designed to process grief, just watch a child experience a loss without the influence of adults who have been reprogrammed.  It is an amazingly beautiful experience, its normal and natural to grieve a loss, nothing is wrong, nothing requires fixing or replacing, it only requires experiencing the normal and natural process.

My goal is to help others BE with someone who has experienced a loss and not let it be about you, but them. To LET GO of the message you must fix it, change it, or take it away.  As a parent who has lost a child, if I could "get over it already" let me assure you that is the first thing I would be doing.  Grieving is exhausting and lonely!  I have lost many people in my "supposed circle of support and I continue to lose people who think it has been long enough, that I need to move on, that I am moody, apathetic, sad, depressed and even angry, sensitive, and indecisive.  ALL true statements that I am moody, apathetic, sad, depressed and even angry, sensitive, and indecisive.  I will add, I cry alone and in public, and I'm still not over it.  NO, because I can not just get over it and move on.

Am I progressing? Absolutely!
Is it quick enough for others or most? Absolutely not! 
Do I appear just fine at times? You bet I do! 
Am I just fine? Do you have all day?

Sadly, I am not alone, it is not uncommon to experience more loss while grieving a LOSS because it just doesn't work for others.  Yes, it adds salt to wounds and complicates grief. (Complicated grief is something in and of itself, for another day.) Reality is my circle of support has become smaller and honestly, only gets smaller.  Its sad, I grieve, I feel anger and rage, but I am better for it.  I do not have the energy or ability to manage others needs for me.  Shedding of relationships that can not withstand the storms of life allows room for ones that can. I have gained people,  people who love me, appreciate that they can not fix, change, or make things go away, but that they can give me a hug, send me a text that says, "I love you or just checking in."  We have people who have prayed and fasted for us that we don't even know.  Yes, that makes me cry too.  

It is my desire to encourage you not to avoid that loved one, friend, co-worker, neighbor, or stranger who has experienced a loss, just BE with them, be honest, don't quote the cliches that cause more feelings of "something is wrong with me and I need to be fixed."

HONESTLY eye contact with a smile or a warm hello or simply saying "I have no idea what you are experiencing and I can only imagine."  If you want to relate further add, "I only know what I felt when I experienced a loss." Eye contact is comforting, so many people avoid people who are grieving.  Trust me I am not paranoid.  I bet many people can share the experience of seeing someone they know at a store and "catching them" go the other way, ok, ok, maybe that was you because you did not know what to say or do.  Do't beat yourself up, now you know how to respond different, better, more.

No words will take away the intensity of the immense pain.  That is not your role.  Your role is to offer support in the form of a hug, a visit, a meal, a text, a call, a suggested "I am going to come get you and take you for a ride, a walk, or I would like to just come sit with you.  I would like to come clean your bathrooms or wash your floors, or heck your whole house, which day is best? Start with 2 days and if those days don't work, offer other times. No expectations. Say, "I really just want to support you and I don't know how or what that looks like." Making decisions in the midst of grief is hard, so keep expectations low and be ok with feeling awkward and uncomfortable.  If it is your desire to truly support someone, don't say, "I am here call me if you need anything." Consider yourself informed, IT WILL NOT HAPPEN!  Individuals grieving do NOT know what they need or if they do how to ask for it.  

To those I have lost.  I forgive you!

To those I have gained in a variety of ways.  I appreciate you!

To those who have been on this journey from the beginning and stuck it out and not given up on what some consider "a hopeless mess" I love you and want you to know your time and energy has not been in vain or gone unnoticed, but has been that encouragement I have needed to grieve and grow.  

Real relationships are messy.  Requiring authenticity, vulnerability, being raw, the good, the bad, the ugly folks.  

The next time you are aware of someone experiencing a loss, reach out.  You will survive.  It is ok if you feel like you want to jump out of your skin, you will not.  You will offer a gift. A gift that says you matter, your pain matters, your normal. You are NOT ALONE.



Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Breaking The Silence

Sharing Our Story Publicly for the First Time

It has been a long time coming, many conversations, prayers, and hope that the ending would change.  We believe that sharing OUR STORY , in hopes of encouraging others, will move us along in healing and grieving.

This is our journey, written by my husband Ben.   Perhaps I will share my response to this journey, but for nowhere is our story and Ben's perspective.






Friday, January 4, 2013

TO WEAR FORGIVENESS LIKE A CROWN



Wading through this chapter of our journey, I find that at times I am overwhelmed with the magnitude of the injustices that have occurred within our family over the last 5 months and I feel like I am sinking.  Those who are closer to our family know the intimate details and the pain we have endured.  You do not need to know the details to know that any time one is wronged, bitterness, resentment and anger can and often do creep in.  The greater the "wrong" the greater the chance that one can find themselves justifying being angry or bitter.  I have never been so aware of this as I have over the last 3 months.  In fact the awareness and the thoughts of what would happen to me if I allowed bitterness and anger to take root has paralyzed me.  What can I possibly do and where do I began to protect my heart, soul and mind from wreaking the consequences when I can not even move.
 

How does one endure the evilness and corruption of people who abused power, a flawed justice system that failed us at every stop, bribes, lies, and deals.  How do I make peace with knowing TRUTH will win and turn and walk away, not righting any wrongs, seeing that the lies, bribes and deals be uncovered and do nothing about the defamation of who we are as humans, parents and professionals.

There is no potential for a positive outcome in my attempts to uncover evil and corruption. It only serves to further torment me and deplete me of the little emotional energy I do have to give to my family.  What I know  and have experienced about grief is a deep fog, a separation of knowing and doing, and a sense of sadness even in moments of happiness.  I am numb and will do anything to avoid reality

In times of discomfort when words seem inadequate, music has helped me to make meaning. So much so that I have not been able to listen to music out of fear of completely unravelingHowever, over the last few days I found myself humming a couple of choruses over and over, and so I turned to my friend, Pandora, to listen. As I listened, a familiar song played and the words gave me a sense of peace, possible resolution, and as I listened the sense of urgency I felt to pursue these words and find healing intensified.  For a moment I believe I felt excitement at the promise of thawing my numb, facing reality and protecting my heart from bitterness, anger and resentment taking root in my heart. 

At the foot of the cross
Where grace and suffering meet
You have given me life
Through the judgment You received

And You've won my heart
Yes You've won my heart
Now I can

Trade these ashes in for beauty
And wear forgiveness like a crown

Coming to kiss the feet of mercy
I lay every burden down
At the foot of the cross

(portion of At The Foot of the Cross by Katherine Scott)

What I must do to heal, love, give and care is to lay it all down and LIVE OUT what wearing forgiveness like a crown looks like in 2013.  Intentionally forgiving the people who abused their power, repeatedly lied under oath, bribed and lied to our daughter, defamed us as parents, and purposefully deceived to promote personal agenda's and denied us the freedom to live out our faith convictions as parents. 


God, give me the GRACE I need to trust and pursue what You want for me.  To CHOOSE forgiveness, not revenge, or my version of justice, to lay it all down, as many times a day, hour to fill my heart with healing, leaving no room for bitterness, resentment and anger to take root.  I WILL CHOOSE TO WEAR FORGIVENESS LIKE A CROWN.