Grief and celebrations
This is social advice mostly for those who know someone who is grieving. It’s a time of year when many of us gather in celebration, so it’s timely advice. The world around you celebrates, and that magnifies your sense of loss and diminishes your ability to enjoy the holidays. Most of us who have had... Read More→
Grieving the loss of a child as a couple
Whenever trauma strikes, statistics abound. The statistical divorce rate for parents who lose a child is said to be very high. Your statistical experience may be different if you can better understand what’s happening when a couple grieves the loss of a child. Eighteen years later our divorce rate remains zero percent, but that wasn’t... Read More→
Anger in Grief
Anger in Grief This is an advanced and long post. There are a few links early in the post that new followers might wish to branch off for a warm up before the main course, so that the rest of what I am saying might make more sense to you. Anger is a common component... Read More→
The Choice to Heal
Healing your soul after loss of a loved one is a deeply personal choice. In some traditional societies, widows will choose to identify themselves as widows by wearing only black for the rest of their lives. They literally wear the loss of their husband on their perpetually black sleeve, for life. It’s one of many... Read More→
Resolve
Abject Terror I write this just days after Hamas terrorists attacked Israel, committed war crimes, killing and kidnapping innocent Israelis, many of them young adults. There is a pallor that sets into my life after such events because I personally know the depth of the grief that the loss of a child will bring to... Read More→
Strange Things Happen
September 2000, we were in Kennebunkport for a week away as a couple after a very busy and successful time in my small business. Life was good, very good. Our kids were safe at home in the care of their grandmother. It was a blustery cool day as we walked the shore and listened to... Read More→
Survivors of Suicide
We are called “Survivors of suicide” because someone we loved or knew committed suicide. When speaking or writing on grief, I focus on removal of anger as a critical step to healing. Suicide is a complex grief that makes the elimination of all anger an unreasonable expectation. Instead, we become firefighters extinguishing anger from wildfires... Read More→
When people say nothing
In another post https://distillinggrief.com/2023/05/06/what-do-i-say/ I explain some points about how to speak to those grieving, in this post I address how to understand and accept those who can’t say anything. Let’s face it; given a chance, people often take the easiest path. Perhaps part of our resentment of grief is rooted in the fact that... Read More→
The scars of grief
I have a fine line on my face, a barely visible scar from the corner of my left eye to the middle of my cheek, a surgery to remove a malignant melanoma. A brilliant surgeon and technology left me as close to perfect as possible while removing the risk of malignancy. Grief wounds us, grief... Read More→
Timelines of Grief
Four to six weeks after a death brings an emptiness and isolation to those closest to the death. Thus begins the dangerous times of grief when only the strongest still surround us. There are emotional traps in grief built on perceived “normal” timelines for healing. A large part of this issue is that many see... Read More→