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Reply by eKIM
01 May 2021, 4:42 PM

I was reading this recently and I thought I would share it with you.  Let me know if you find it helpful.


- eKim


https://www.centerforloss.com/2016/12/journey-healing-seek-reconciliation-not-resolution/


 


On the Journey to Healing: Seek Reconciliation, Not Resolution


by Center for Loss | Dec 14, 2016 | Articles


by Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.


 


“Mourning never really ends. Only as time goes on, it erupts less frequently.”


How do you ever find your way out of the wilderness of your grief? A number of psychological models describing grief refer to “resolution,” “recovery,” “reestablishment,” or “reorganization” as being the destination of your grief journey.


As a bereavement caregiver, you may even have been taught that the grief journey’s end comes when the mourner resolves, or recovers from, his or her grief.


But you may also be coming to understand one of the fundamental truths of grief: Grief never truly ends. People do not “get over” grief. My personal and professional experience tells me that a total return to “normalcy” after the death of someone loved is not possible; we are all forever changed by the experience of grief.


Reconciliation is a term I find more appropriate for what occurs as you work to integrate the new reality of moving forward in life without the physical presence of the person who died. With reconciliation comes a renewed sense of energy and confidence, an ability to fully acknowledge the reality of the death and a capacity to become re-involved in the activities of living. There is also an acknowledgment that pain and grief are difficult, yet necessary, parts of life.


As the experience of reconciliation unfolds, you will recognize that life is and will continue to be different without the presence of the person who died. Changing the relationship with the person who died from one of presence to one of memory and redirecting one’s energy and initiative toward the future often takes longer—and involves more hard work—than most people are aware. We, as human beings, never resolve our grief, but instead become reconciled to it.


We come to reconciliation in our grief journeys when the full reality of the death becomes a part of us. Beyond an intellectual working through of the death, there is also an emotional and spiritual working through. What had been understood at the “head” level is now understood at the “heart” level.


Keep in mind that reconciliation doesn’t just happen. You can help others reach it through encouraging their deliberate mourning. They reconcile their grief by…



  • talking it out.

  • writing it out.

  • crying it out.

  • thinking it out.

  • playing it out.

  • painting (or sculpting, etc.) it out.

  • dancing it out

  • etcetera!


To experience reconciliation requires that you descend, not transcend. You don’t get to go around or above your grief. You must go through it. And while you are going through it, you must express it you are to reconcile yourself to it.


You will fine that as you achieve reconciliation, the sharp, ever-present pain of grief will give rise to a renewed sense of meaning and purpose. Your feeling of loss will not completely disappear, yet they will soften, and the intense pangs of grief will become less frequent.  Hope for a continued life will emerge as you are able to make commitments to the future, realizing that the person you have given love to and received love from will never be forgotten. The unfolding of this journey is not intended to create a return to an “old normal” but the discovery of a “new normal.”


To help explore where you are in your movement toward reconciliation, the following signs that suggest healing may be helpful. You don’t have to see all of these signs for healing to be taking place. Again, remember that reconciliation is an ongoing process. If you are early in the work of mourning, you may not see any signs of reconciliation. But this list will give you a way to monitor movement toward healing.


 


Signs of reconciliation


As mourners embrace their grief and do the work of mourning, they can and will be able to demonstrate the majority of the following:



  • A recognition of the reality and finality of the death.

  • A return to stable eating and sleeping patterns.

  • A renewed sense of release from the person who has died. They will have thoughts about the person, but they will not be preoccupied by these thoughts.

  • The capacity to enjoy experiences in life that are normally enjoyable.

  • The establishment of new and healthy relationships.

  • The capacity to live a full life without feelings of guilt or lack of self-respect.

  • The drive to organize and plan one’s life toward the future.

  • The serenity to become comfortable with the way things are rather than attempting to make things as they were.

  • The versatility to welcome more change in life.

  • The awareness that they have allowed themselves to fully grieve, and they have survived.

  • The awareness that nobody “gets over” grief; instead, they have a new reality, meaning and purpose in their lives.

  • The acquaintance of new parts of themselves that they have discovered in their grief journeys.

  • The adjustment to new role changes that have resulted from the loss of the relationship.

  • The acknowledgment that the pain of loss in an inherent part of life resulting from the ability to give and receive love.


Reconciliation emerges much in the way grass grows. Usually we don’t check our lawns daily to see if the grass is growing, but it does grow and soon we come to realize it’s time to mow the grass again. Likewise, we don’t look at ourselves each day as mourners to see how we are healing. Yet we do come to realize, over the course of months and years, that we have come a long way. We have taken some important steps toward reconciliation.


Usually there is not one great moment of “arrival,” but subtle changes and small advancements. It’s helpful to have gratitude for even very small advancements, If you are beginning to taste your food again, be thankful. If you mustered the energy to meet your friend for lunch, be grateful. If you finally got a good night’s sleep, rejoice.


One of my greatest teachers, C. S. Lewis, wrote in A Grief Observed about his grief symptoms as they eased in his journey to reconciliation: “There was no sudden, striking, and emotional transition. Like the warming of a room or the coming of daylight, when you first notice them they have already been going on for some time.”


Of course, you will take some steps backward from time to time, but that is to be expected. Keep believing in yourself. Set your intention to reconcile your grief and have hope that you can and will come to live and love gain.


 


Read the book: “The Journey Through Grief: Reflections On Healing” 

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01 May 2021, 4:47 PM

eKIM as always gives excellent thoughts, ideas and suggestions. Thank you eKIM

Katherine
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Reply by AMT
03 May 2021, 2:19 PM

Hi Pammie,
It's AMT, how are you doing today? I am on the forum this morning and read your post from a few days back, it looks like you were having a hard day. I'm glad Katherine was able to help answer your question about older posts. I have really enjoyed reading, and have found quite moving, SadSandy's posts over the past months. 
Grieving is tough hard work. One moment we're in despair and then confusion, panic, anger, sadness and anxiety (sometimes in order, sometimes all at once) seem to come out of nowhere. I bet every part of your routine and what you could count on and predict has changed. I remember feeling like some days I was going crazy. When those moments come, see if you can find your breath and feel your feet on the floor. I know it might sound trivial but it helps. I also have to move my body when I'm having big feelings, some days I remember walking and walking and walking. 
I'll be thinking of you today,
AMT
 
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Reply by Saara
05 Jun 2021, 6:09 PM

ColourCrazy, it is hard enough to have lived through your loss, try not to feel as if you are not acting the way you think you should.  We all handle grief differently, and our journeys have all been different.  In the case of a long illness, there can be a great deal of anticipatory grief; likely this has been part of your experience as well.  I couldn't cry either; now, a year after my husband's death, I feel bruised, easily moved to tears by other's pain, but I never did have that big cry.  Be kind to yourself, know that there is no right way to grieve.
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Reply by eKIM
05 Jun 2021, 7:22 PM

Hi Saara

You said, "I couldn't cry either; now, a year after my husband's death, I feel bruised, easily moved to tears by other's pain."

I use a "coping technique" that helps me when I am faced with the pain of another.  I could share it with you if you like.

We cannot "prescribe" anything for the grief of others.  Everyone grieves differently. 

What helps one, doesn't help another.  However, listening to many, many ideas about how others cope, sometimes, out of the dozens, we will find something to help ourselves.

- eKim

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Reply by Pammie
06 Jun 2021, 3:30 PM

Hello AMT, 
It feel like I dropped out of things for the past few weeks. Kind of like being in a state of free-fall. I hope I'm touching down now and trying to re-focus here. Scary how time seems to move like that.
Anyway wanted to respond to that last message you posted to me  on May 3rd. Wow, a month ago?  Anyway, to what you were saying "find your breath and feel your feet on the floor". Yes. That is what has been helping. I have been having panic attacks apropos of nothing. So basically, that's what I've been doing the past month.  I am trying to focus on my breath. Sitting up in bed, or sitting down on a chair, I try to  find and plant my feet firmly on the floor and to focus on my breath, basic breath, in through the nose, down through the windpipe, into the lungs, down to the bottom of the luncgs, feeling it in my belly. Then i reverse the process and let my breath gently rise from deep within my belly, up through the lungs and gently out again. I have been aiming at following 3 breaths at a time and, do you know, I was lucky to find just 1 breath only and focus on that.  It was very difficult counting to 3  at times! I'm also thinking that temporarily I may need a mild short-term  medication, as needed and will speak to my dr on Thursday on a "tele-visit". I have not establised a family dr  as yet since we had relocated in May last year so that my husband could have gone into cancer treatment right away. That was enough to deal with this past couple of years. Now that I'm re-emerging out of this tunnel, I find myself lacking in necessary services, like basic health care. Yes, i'm one of those people falling through the cracks during covid.  Hence, staring at square 1.  
Pammie
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Reply by AMT
13 Jun 2021, 2:32 PM

Hi Pammie,

I'm so glad you've posted. Today is June 13th, several days since you posted. I wonder how your appointment went on Thursday (you don't need to share medical information on the forum) and how today finds you?

Grief sure manages to warp time doesn't it? Pandemic grief is even stranger. 

I so resonate with your celebration of even following one breath. I have so been there. I remember practicing a walking meditation that I grew to love but the frustration of not being able to stay with even one step before thought was snagged. I do believe that in difficult moments our only option is to stop, breathe and find our body. Sometimes when I need some extra help I gently place my right hand over my hear space until I can feel the warmth of my hand. It's a strategy that comes out of the mindful self-compassion program.

I  noticed several acts of finding your way out of the cracks. Posting on the forum, finding your breath, finding a medical provider, making an appointment. These are all steps through the tunnel.

Sending warm and encouraging thoughts your way today,
AMT
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Reply by Pammie
13 Jun 2021, 5:08 PM

Hello AMT, Thank you so very much for reachinhg out to me. I have been feeling very lost indeed. So now that I have"caught my breath again"  I will try to make sense of this grief process, in case I lose my way again. Definitely not a linear process, I can tell you. I seem very much "all over the place".  


I have started grief counselling at my localm hospice here, through weekly televisits. Initially they helped but we seem to be stuck now. 


Then I was invited to the ZOOM grief meeting. I  initially thought i was okay with it. Then the next day I was slammed with all that collective "raw grief" that had been projected from that virtual room, about 9 grieving people all together on one monitor in my living room, and I felt myself howling in pain since then. 


Tuesday I go in for my first in-person visit at the Hospice. I'm very nervous about it. I've managed to come to terms with the telephone visits and i don't know how I'll do with an -in-person. I have been impacted severely by the pandemic and by cancer self-quarentine and lack skills for negotiating my way through real life situations.


So briefly this is where I'm at. Thanks for checking in.
Pam

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Reply by Mark99
13 Jun 2021, 5:18 PM

Pam

Thank you your share touches on something that I found early on when Donna was first diagnosed with Stage IV Cancer. Groups are hard and painful. It seems there is one person who has to share the complete unabridged horror of a loved ones death or dying. That happened to me and I wanted to vomit. I went to a greif counselor during Donna's illness and following her death. The counselor said that groups are not a first choice. Communities are Like here Communities are advocates and support systems.  

I will say that sharing is important. It takes those puzzel pieces held in our minds and allows us to see them in 3D. Have others see them so we can reflect and find a path or knowledge. Bravo for sharing Bravo 
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Reply by Pammie
13 Jun 2021, 5:39 PM

Hello Mark, 


Thank you for the feedback, especially the part about wanting to vomit. I was trying to be polite myself and not get to graphic with details. But yes, that feeling was there. But I have learnt to hold a lot of feelings in. 


So, I too feel groups are not great if it's too soon. I am holding off on the zoom group as well as the walking group. Too many fears. I cancelled out of the walking group at the last minute, thereby ruining it for someone else who would love to have had that spot. 


I wish there there was a way at my Hospice to be matched up with just one person at a time... a more or less compatible person, male, female, other, with whom to go on walks or sit and have tea and talk. 


I'm glad that you feel that these virtual communities work well. I'ii try to check in more often.Thanks Pam

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