Whenever I get up in the morning or go to bed in the evening
sorrow wakes up with me and goes to sleep with me. Sorrow walks beside me at
all times, morning, noon and night. There is nothing that I do or think about
that does not include sorrow in it. I cannot escape it. Beautiful things bring
tears to my eyes. The passing of David brought me so much sorrow. I do not hate
sorrow. My soul is educated by it. Sorrow is the teacher of my heart and not my
intellect or will. Memories, personal experiences of yesterday are the lessons.
These lessons are learned through tears. Most of what I learned came in the
darkest hours of my life. This is the most costly education as my son paid for
it with his life. Sorrow has has brought me calmness and strength as well as
the power to endure. It seems to be the key to unlock the door to unseen and beautiful
things and allows me to comfort those who need me. Love and sorrow go hand in
hand, the greater the love, the greater the sorrow.
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Monday, February 13, 2017
The people that I appreciated most
It is the people who did not
try to enter into my feelings and did not offer me false comfort or false solutions
that I appreciated the most. They did not tell me that I need to take something
to feel better. They did not tell me that I need to see a therapist. They did
not tell me that I need to have more faith. They did not tell me that I need to
read my Bible more. They did not tell me that they feel my pain. They did not
tell me that life goes on. They did not tell me to be thankful that I had David
for 30 years. They did not tell me to be thankful for the memories. They did
not tell me that he is in a better place. They did not tell me that it is the
will of God. They did not tell me that I am strong. They did not tell me that I
should not live in the past. They did not ask me if I had other children. They
did not ask me how he died. These are the people who did not invade my privacy
but stood at the periphery respecting me and my journey through the path of
grief and sorrow. They encouraged me just by listening to me or giving me a
hug, knowing full well that they were as powerless as I was.
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
Jacob refused to be comforted
When Jacob was given his son’s coat of
many colors dipped in blood he realized that Joseph must have been devoured by
an evil beast. In Genesis 37:34-35 we read that he tore his clothes and mourned
for his son. All his sons and all his daughters rose up to comfort him; but he
refused to be comforted; and he said: “For I will go down into the grave unto
my son mourning”. Thus his father wept for him. What I glean from this is that
any parent who loses a child will forever mourn that child until the day that
the parent joins the child in death. Then why is it that society wants us to
quit mourning our children and to “move on” as if the catastrophe of losing our
children is to diminish with time?
https://www.amazon.com/Topics-Grief-woman-who-lost/dp/1480224898/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1460397653&sr=8-1&keywords=topics+in+grief
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