Mike and I moved many times through the years of our marriage (read about that here).
Whenever we relocated we left houses and some unnecessary things behind and carried many possessions with us to the next destination.
Such is the nature of life. Change comes and we have to decide what to carry with us and what to leave behind. It’s rarely an all or nothing proposition, but a mix of both.
Since the death of my husband, a little more than year ago, I’ve learned the pervasive thought of modern western culture is to grieve on a linear path of stages for a while, get through it, get over it and finally move on to a happy, contented new life.
Grief is a problem to be ‘fixed’ rather than an experience to be acknowledged.
Our culture doesn’t deal well with death, pain, suffering or grief. We personally avoid these at all costs and we often don’t know what to do with those who are experiencing them. Our convenience loving, pleasure seeking, short attention span, hurry-up-and-make-bad-stuff-go-away culture, often and unintentionally places grieving people in a position of pretending to be alright or having to defend their sorrow, eventually forcing them into suffocating silence.
Moving on implies leaving everything behind. To not speak of our dead loved one again, acting as if they never existed, if not ridiculous, is at the very least, unfair and a dishonor to our departed and the love we shared with them.
The truth is, our love for a person doesn’t die with them. We never ‘get over’ it, because their life and death are ingrained into our experience and become an integral part of who we are. As long as I breathe, I will carry Mike’s life and death forward into the future I learn to live without him.
Recently someone was brave enough to tell me they had heard about Mike’s death and said,
“That must be so difficult.” This was an acknowledgement of the pain.
“Tell me about him. What was he like?” This was an honoring of his existence.
They didn’t dance around the reality of his life or death and what I was going through. They didn’t assume I didn’t want to talk about it. They didn’t offer cliches or platitudes. And they weren’t afraid of my sadness or tears. They entered into the loss with me.
It was a beautiful thing and something we all need to practice as we enter into one another’s pain and suffering. When we do we are mirroring God’s heart for the broken.
He didn’t avoid our pain and suffering or run from it. He put on a suit of skin and entered totally into the experience of humanity. The blessings, fear, joy, sadness, laughter, tears and darkness.
God chose and still chooses to be with us in all of it. He doesn’t pretend to make the hard stuff go away but enters into it with us.
He promises to be Emanuel. God With Us!
And moving forward, especially during the sadness of another Christmas season, I can be thankful for this, even when it’s difficult to be thankful for anything else.
❤️Diane thank you for always being honest. Each time I selfishly take something from your pain-fillled sharing because I realize that I am sometimes caught in the vacuum of this culture. Thank you for challenging me to change that in myself and extend it to the world around me, Especially with others that bear their pain in silence. I love you and Jon and wish I had known the three of you when Mike was here.
Beautifully explained. A lot of people dont know how to respond to others grief. A subject if not experienced is hard to address. Thanks for your sharing
Gives helpful insite.
This is beautifully said…grief is never over . We chose to keep going and their memory is tearful sometimes but people need to speak of them and not be afraid to ask us about them as we press on into our life in a new style , one without them. Iris
So well spoken, Diane! Beautiful.