The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society - Fighting Blood Cancers
3 Replies Last post: Nov 3, 2009 2:18 PM by dufferin  
stagsgirl   109 posts since
Oct 13, 2009
Currently Being Moderated

Nov 2, 2009 9:43 AM

Experiences of Grief

A friend sent me this, and I thought it might be helpful to share it with all of you here.

 

EXPERIENCES OF GRIEF

 

Grief is a normal and natural reaction to the death of a loved one. Most of us are not prepared for the long journey of grief, which is sometimes devastating, frightening, and often lonely.  We may think, do, and say things that are very unlike us.  There seems to be no respite, no end to the intense feelings that we experience.

 

Grief has been likened to a raw open wound.  With great care it eventually will heal but there will always be a scar.  Life will never be the same but eventually you will get better.

 

The experiences of grief have been compared to enduring a fierce storm at sea.  The waves are peaked and close together, and eventually the sea becomes calmer, but occasionally the storm regroups, strengthening without any warning. For several hours, days or weeks, you may not feel grief; then suddenly you meet someone, or see something, or hear something, and grief resumes.  It seems as if you are taking one step forward and two back.

 

Grief has its common and its unique sides.  Although it is a universal experience, no two people grieve the same, even in the same family.  Like a snowflake or a fingerprint, each person's grief has characteristics all its own.

 

It is important to understand some of the following concepts about grief:

 

GRIEF WORK - The expression "grief work" is very true.  It may be the hardest work that you will ever perform.  It is draining.

 

CONTROL - We CANNOT control the feelings that arise within us.  These feelings come from deep inside, but we can choose what to do with them.  We can accept or reject them.  To deny only prolongs our grief.  Remember, what we do determines whether we remain in our grief or survive.  Feelings are not bad or wrong.  They should be recognized and faced honestly.

 

CHOICES - About grief: There are no choices.  You MUST go through it.  The expression of grief is essential for good emotional and physical health even though it is painful and difficult.  There are no easy answers or short cuts, no way under, over, or around your grief.  Although grief may hurt desperately, you must go through it.

 

MAJOR DECISIONS - It is strongly suggested not to make major decisions (such as moving, money matters, etc.) unless absolutely necessary during the early stages of grief when judgment is cloudy.  The conventional wisdom, "Never act in haste" was never more applicable.

 

LISTENER(S) - Find someone who will listen. Talking is therapy.

 

GRIEF HAS NO TIMETABLE - Grief often takes much longer than the bereaved or the people in their lives expect.  It helps to take one hour, one day at a time.


REMEMBER - People have a natural inclination to recover.  Eventually you'll look back and realize; you weren't going crazy...you were grieving.

 

BE PATIENT WITH YOURSELF.  RECOVERING FROM GRIEF TAKES TIME.

dufferin   6 posts since
Aug 5, 2009
Currently Being Moderated
1. Nov 2, 2009 4:57 PM in response to: stagsgirl
Re: Experiences of Grief

Thank you kindly for sharing this. It's been nearly seven months since I lost my partner due to complications from her stem-cell transplant, and right now I feel as if I'm at the one-step-forward-two-steps-back stage. I cry more frequently these days than I did in the days and weeks following her passing, and I can't remember the last time I had a quality night of sleep.

 

Anyhow, I appreciate each and everyone's contribution to this board. Thank you again.

 

John       

dufferin   6 posts since
Aug 5, 2009
Currently Being Moderated
3. Nov 3, 2009 2:18 PM in response to: stagsgirl
Re: Experiences of Grief

My partner died on April 9 of this year, 14 days after her transplant from veno-occulsive disease (multiple organ failure) caused by the toxicity of the preconditioning chemo regiment. She had been in remission since November, after her initial induction treatment, followed by a round of consolidation in December. Her brother - and only sibling - was her donor, a perfect match. Her AML was confirmed back in September, after an initial diagnosis of myelofibrosis. Prior to this, she had lived with a blood disorder known as essential thrombocytosis for about 20 years. Because of her history and the type of AML, the doctors felt the SCT was her only hope of long-term remission.

 

I find myself reliving her final days over and over, when she was in obvious pain and unable to communicate verbally. As you did with your father, I try to make sense of those few moments when Shannon was still lucid and determined to speak. I have feelings of guilt, frustration and sadness constantly swimming above or just below the surface, and sometimes they hit hard and can be overwhelming. Although friends have offered to listen, it has become more difficult for me to seek them out for support and to articulate my personal experiences. There is a disconnect that invariably happens when the grieving subsides for the majority of those around you, while you're still standing there in the thick of it. I'm beginning a new breavement group this week and, hopefully, the talk will help.

 

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I lost my father 20 years ago and I thought then I would never recover from it. As the note you posted suggests, grief is work...and it takes time.

 

Regards,

John            

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