Showing posts with label Grief's Paradox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grief's Paradox. Show all posts

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Thursday's Therapy - 8 Ideas for Healing to Start in Your Child-Loss Grief






Thursday's Therapy

8 Ideas for Healing 
to Start 
in Your Child-Loss Grief


with


~Thomas M. Ellis





Remember, suffering alone does not teach. Time does not heal all wounds. For healing to begin, intentional grief work is necessary. Developing tools and skills to help you accommodate to your changed world is necessary. So what helps you to begin this healing process? 

Here are a few ideas:


  • Companions for the journey. Are you spending enough time with others who truly care about you and who validate your personal grief process? Clergy, friends who "get it," family members who "get it," a grief group, or a grief therapist may be on your list. Do you feel cared for, understood, and validated in your experience?

  • Time for your grief. How much time do you spend each day acknowledging and taking care of yourself? Grief demands your attention. You have not failed and you aren't "going crazy"--you are grieving, which takes time. 

  • Permission for expression. Is it okay for you to feel a mix of emotions? Discover different ways to externalize your thoughts and feelings of grief. Talking, crying, and laughing are okay. Loss is the problem, not you.

  • Becoming an expert. Are you curious about this life experience? Pay attention to what grief feels like, how it ebbs and flows, and what helps it to diminish. Gathering information about your loss can reduce anxiety.

  • Naming what is lost and what is not. Have you focused both on what you have lost and on what you have left? Clarifying your multiple losses and recognizing both what is left and what may come can lead to hope.

  • Be kind to yourself. Are you paying attention to yourself? Realize that you can't do this alone. Do what you can and not what others think or say you should do. Promote a sense of calm and healing. It's okay to take a break from your grief.

  • Embracing imperfection. Realize that you don't have all the answers. You will continue to make good and bad choices. When it feels as if you can't make any more decisions, don't.

  • Creating places of sanctuary. Where do you feel safe and free to be real with your grief? Peaceful environments in and out of your home allow you to fulfill your need for peace, quiet, and escape. Find the place that nourish you--you may have some favorites already.


Remember that you won't simply "get over" your grief. Rather, it sits on your shoulder. But if you periodically turn your head and look at it straight on, the honest acknowledgment of your pain will bring relief. Grief is hard work, and it will take as long as it takes. Being still and present in times of despair is a healing approach to this work. Grieving can become a sacred and creative time for you to discover who you are and how you choose to transform your life. Many have discovered that they can hold on to two opposing ideas--grief and hope--at the same time. You can, too.


~Thomas M. Ellis (2006)
This Thing Called Grief: New Understandings of Loss












Picture, thanks to Grieving Mothers

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Wednesday's Woe - Love's Demand ~ Taste the Pain as Love Never Dies





“Dear One,

your tears do not fall upon desolate lands,

rather they are collected and counted, each one

as they fall into my nail scarred hands."


~Toni Ann Alba




Wednesday's Woe



Love's Demand ~Taste the Pain as


Love Never Dies




When I'm weak, then I am strong;

Help me Lord, not feel so wrong!

Having You hover o'er me

Is the best place I can be...




Like the beast upon the hill

Looks to You to feed him still,

Put a check upon my heart

When I'm weak and fall apart...

For I'm a grieving mother ~

There's no grief any tougher...


My God comes to comfort me ~

Not condemn nor question me.

He will be there when I'm weak;

To my inner soul, He'll speak.



He put love into my heart

For my child right from the start,


And He knows love never dies;

He knows why this mother cries,


So my tears He'll not despise:

To not cry, my heart belies!



My hurt and pain He won't scorn;

He said ~ "Blessed are those who mourn."



Help me Your words to believe~

For child-loss mothers must grieve

And trust that You'll come beside...

In Your bosom, let me hide.



Lord, when You draw me near,

Your nail-scarred hand will catch each tear.



Father, when I look at You,

I see tears in Your eyes too,

For You know the hurt and pain:

Your own Child-loss scars remain.



All my tears You understand...

They're a part of love's demand!



So when I'm weak, I'm strong

When for my baby girl I long.


I'll taste the pain such love brings...

Till my heart in Heaven sings!



*****



Those who sow in tears

will weep with songs of joy.


~Psalm 126:5



In Heaven,

(God) will wipe wipe every tear from their eyes.
There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain,
for the old order of things has passed away."

Revelation 21:4-5










~Toni Ann Alba -from comment on http://blog.greglaurie.com/?p=2695
All Scripture from the New International Version of The Holy Bible
Poem - Love's Demand ~ Taste the Pain as Love Never Dies - Angie Bennett Prince - 9/5/10