Sunday, December 16, 2012

Grief doesn't end after a year

Just because it has been a year since Spencer passed away doesn't mean that the grieving stops. If anything I have had many, many widow friends tell me that if anything, it gets a little bit harder the second year... and as the second year is now in full swing, I can completely understand that. The fog of losing my husband has lifted. I am no longer just treading along, going through the motions. I'm fully aware and because of that things seem a lot harder than they were last year.

Some things do get easier, but I am in full belief that grieving is a life long process. It's something that you never, ever just "get over". You learn to work through things and cope in different ways. You begin to build a new normal. Life does go on, it just takes awhile.

I came across this post on a widows blog and I still feel like it applies to me, and probably will for a very long time. Yes, this is VERY helpful for a new widow to post so people can know how to help, but I think it's also important for those of you around us [by us I mean, us widowed people] to remember that around the holidays, anniversaries, angelversaries, and significant dates, no matter how far along we are in our grieving process, that we need your support more thane ever. I understand that most of the time you just don't know what to say. You don't know how to act.

Maybe this will help you understand a little bit better. Give you some insight. I know that this month has been really hard on me. I feel like I've hit a brick wall. But your support is huge in helping me get through each and every day and I'd really appreciate it if you could take the time to help me.

Hope this helps some of you! I've bolded/underlined and colored some of the things that really stick out to me and really apply to me, personally.


"How You Can Help Me"

Please talk about my loved one, even though he is gone. It is more comforting to cry than to pretend that he never existed. I need to talk about him, and I need to do it over and over.

Be patient with my agitation. Nothing feels secure in my world. Get comfortable with my crying. Sadness hits me in waves, and I never know when my tears may flow. Just sit with me in silence and hold my hand.

Don't abandon me with the excuse that you don't want to upset me. You can't catch my grief. My world is painful, and when you are too afraid to call me or visit or say anything, you isolate me at a time when I most need to be cared about. If you don't know what to say, just come over, give me a hug or touch my arm, and gently say, "I'm sorry." You can even say, "I just don't know what to say, but I care, and want you to know that."

Just because I look good does not mean that I feel good. Ask me how I feel only if you really have time to find out.

I am not strong. I'm just numb. When you tell me I am strong, I feel that you don't see me. I will not recover. This is not a cold or the flu. I'm not sick. I'm grieving and that's different. My grieving may only begin 6 months after my loved one's death. Don't think that I will be over it in a year. For I am not only grieving his death, but also the person I was when I was with him, the life that we shared, the plans we had for our children, the places we will never get to go together, and the hopes and dreams that will never come true. My whole world has crumbled and I will never be the same.

I will not always be grieving as intensely, but I will never forget my loved one and rather than recover, I want to incorporate his life and love into the rest of my life. He is a part of me and always will be, and sometimes I will remember him with joy and other times with a tear. Both are okay.

I don't have to accept the death. Yes, I have to understand that it has happened and it is real, but there are some things in life that are just not acceptable. When you tell me what I should be doing, then I feel even more lost and alone. I feel badly enough that my loved one is dead, so please don't make it worse by telling me I'm not doing this right. And remember, I was a capable adult before his death and I still am.

Please don't tell me I can find someone else or that I need to start dating again. I may not be ready. And maybe I don't want to be. And besides, what makes you think people are replaceable? They aren't. Whoever comes after will always be someone different.

I don't even understand what you mean when you say, "You've got to get on with your life." My life is going on, I've been forced to take on many new responsibilities and roles. It may not look the way you think it should. This will take time and I will never be my old self again. So please, just love me as I am today, and know that with your love and support, the joy will slowly return to my life. But I will never forget and there will always be times that I cry.

I need to know that you care about me. I need to feel your touch, your hugs. I need you just to be with me, and I need to be with you. I need to know you believe in me and in my ability to get through my grief in my own way, and in my own time.

Please don't say, "Call me if you need anything." [Yes, I am thankful for your offer, but please don't actually expect a call, text, or message... And don't get offended if I don't take you up on your offer...] I'll never call you because I have no idea what I need. Trying to figure out what you could do for me takes more energy than I have. So, in advance, let me give you some ideas:

(a) Bring food or a movie over to watch together.

(b) Send me a card on special holidays, our wedding anniversary, his birthday, and the anniversary of his death, and be sure to mention his name. You can't make me cry. The tears are here and I will love you for giving me the opportunity to shed them because someone cared enough about me to reach out on this difficult day.

(c) Ask me more than once to join you at a movie or lunch or dinner. I may say no at first or even for a while, but please don't give up on me because somewhere down the line, I may be ready, and if you've given up then I really will be alone.

(d) Understand how difficult it is for me to be surrounded by couples, to walk into events alone, to feel out of place in the same situations where I used to feel so comfortable.

Please don't judge me now - or think that I'm behaving strangely. Remember I'm grieving. I may even be in shock. I am afraid. I may feel deep rage. I may even feel guilty. But above all, I hurt. I'm experiencing a pain unlike any I've ever felt before and one that can't be imagined by anyone who has not walked in my shoes.

Don't worry if you think I'm getting better and then suddenly I seem to slip backward. Grief makes me behave this way at times. And please don't tell me you know how I feel, or that it's time for me to get on with my life. What I need now is time to grieve. Most of all thank you for being my friend. Thank you for your patience.

Thank you for caring. Thank you for helping, for understanding.

And remember in the days or years ahead, after your loss - when you need me as I have needed you - I will understand. And then I will come and be with you.


--Author Unknown

1 comment:

  1. Very well written. I never knew what to say or do and this really sheds light on how someone who has lost someone so close to their heart. I will keep this in mind as well as tucked away so I can look back on it when I need to. Thanks for sharing. Oh and one day, when I get my life situated, I will ask you to go to lunch even if it takes asking you a few times and we will talk about Spencer and how awesome he was. Thanks for sharing this Nikki

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