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- Newsgroups: alt.support
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!mips!decwrl!concert!rock!epa-rtp!ralph.rtpnc.epa.gov!rbn
- From: rbn@ralph.rtpnc.epa.gov (Bob Boyd)
- Subject: Re: Loss and how to adjust
- Message-ID: <1992Jul22.163111.4113@rtpnc.epa.gov>
- Sender: usenet@rtpnc.epa.gov
- Nntp-Posting-Host: ralph.rtpnc.epa.gov
- Organization: UNISYS/Environmental Protection Agency
- References: <1992Jul21.191115.12686@rchland.ibm.com>
- Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1992 16:31:11 GMT
- Lines: 110
-
- Don,
-
- I tried to reply to your post with e-mail, but it was rejected by a gateway,
- so I'm posting my response here instead.
-
- I'm really touched by your expression of the pain that you are going through.
-
- Your situation sounds pretty painful. Grief work is challenging -- and the
- progress of it is not always the way I would like it to go. Sometimes I am
- just not ready to let go and get on with the next phase of my life. I'm in
- the middle of working on some stuff that goes back to my childhood and I'm
- almost 37 now. Until a couple of years ago I really didn't have the support
- system I needed to fully enter into the grief work that I'm now doing.
-
- I could offer you lots of advice -- somehow I don't think that advice is what
- you need right now. It sounds like you have some needs around being heard,
- and maybe some reassurance that the feelings you are feeling will not overwhelm
- you -- and that they won't last forever.
-
- Most of the people I know who have experienced the death of someone report that
- the anniversaries can be full of emotions -- sometimes the pain comes back in
- flooding waves. You are neither good nor bad if this happens to you -- your
- system is still working through the process of adjusting to the loss and the
- grief.
-
- The pain will not last forever -- the way out of the pain is to shore up
- your support system - - something I have done when it gets intense for me
- is to go out and add to my support system -- this has had a powerful effect
- on me in the last 4-5 months. The way out is through -- you're really doing
- some powerful work to express your fears the way you have in your post.
-
- I've changed my mind -- I'm going to give you some things to think about
- if you choose to.
-
- I wish you well as you struggle with your fears. They sound very powerful
- on the surface -- you may want to consider exploring the question "What
- are each of those fears about? What is underneath them? What is the fear
- protecting you from? Is there something or someone you are trying to control
- through staying in these fears? Or are you trying to control your own
- emotions?"
-
- Another question I would like to pose to you is "How would you like to feel
- about your accident and the loss of Bonnie?" What is getting in the way of
- you moving toward having the feelings you want to have?
-
- Recently I put together some thoughts that have come to me from various sources
- and included them in a post that I made 2-3 weeks ago. Here is that text:
-
-
- Grieving Our Losses
-
- Grieving is a process. It is simple and it is complicated. It can be
- short (a few moments) or it can be long (years). Some people plunge into
- it, while others hold back.
-
- Here are some insights about how the process progresses. It is not always
- linear. Sometimes we skip around, back and forth between steps. Sometimes
- we are in more than 1 step at a time. There are no have-to's in this process.
- There are consequences when we get stuck -- sometimes it helps to ask for
- help with it when we feel stuck.
-
- Grieving can be done alone -- however, it is a sometimes exhausting process
- and may be too much for one person to handle by themselves -- it works
- really well for most of us to find at least 1 other person to be there
- with us to be a witness for our grief. It also helps to ask them or someone
- else to remind us that the pain and other feelings will not last forever --
- they will eventually pass.
-
- Here is what it looks like:
-
- 1. We have awareness of loss, pain, disappointment -- acknowledgement
- that something unpleasant has happened.
-
- 2. We limit our awareness (this is instinctive -- we have to bring it
- down to a manageable size)
- This is a natural part of the process.
- This phase is where we are most likely to get stuck.
-
- Some strategies that we use in this phase:
-
- Holding on through: anger, resentment, bitterness, pretending
- that it didn't happen/isn't true, repeatedly
- telling about it, blaming ourselves.
- Letting go and getting on with my life.
-
- We sometimes get into "racket feelings" -- these are "old" and comfortable
- feelings. Most of us have 1-3 major feelings that are most comfortable.
- This process is usually addictive. The particular feeling could be
- anything -- anger, helplessness, panic, sadness, hopelessness, happy, etc.
-
- 3. We find true awareness -- of our anger, sadness, loss -- these feelings
- may be very intense and last for some length of time. Eventually they
- begin to fade or surface only briefly from time to time.
-
- 4. We reach a sense of acceptance -- a tender, centered, gentle place of
- being able to say "This is my truth"
-
- 5. We gain perspective -- new insights, connections, find some sense of
- meaning for ourselves in the experience.
-
- 6. We revise or restructure our life out of the experience
-
- 7. We find compassion and forgiveness
-
- 8. We undergo a transformation
- --
- Bob Boyd
- rbn@ralph.rtpnc.epa.gov
- Unisys/EPA
-
-