| On
Grief
Yesterday
I
spoke with a friend who had recently suffered a miscarriage. Jill and
her
husband were ecstatically happy with this first pregnancy, and it
seemed
brutally unfair when the baby’s heartbeat vanished, a few weeks before
Easter.
Since then, she said, it's been a long, wild ride through grief and its
entourage
of feelings: sorrow at the loss of something not yet fully manifested,
and
therefore perplexing to wrap the mind around. Anger – outrage, really
-- at the
betrayal of her own body. Shock and horror at something like this
happening to
her, the Golden Child. Of
all the
indignities of grief, perhaps the bitterest is the discovery that our
natural
emotional response is unacceptable to those around us. The very people
whose
support we most need can be unable to give it, by virtue of their own reaction to our suffering. We may
even find that it’s we who end up doing
the caretaking, protecting others from our grief while carrying the
double
burden of our unexpressed pain and their fear. Why
is this
particular emotion so firmly repudiated in our society? Grief is built
into
life, right there at the vibrant juxtaposition of love and death. Yet
through
inexperience, or ignorance, or embarrassment, we shun this inevitable
experience. And our aversive emotional reaction ends up generating pain
to a
much greater degree than the original emotion. Most
modern
Americans grow up sheltered from death. Well into middle age, we remain
willfully ignorant of it. Death is a rarity in the first half of our
lives, and
for a time we can delude ourselves into feeling virtually immune to it.
Compare
this to American life 150 years ago (or life in many countries today),
when a
woman bore five or six children, knowing that one or more would die
before the
age of 5; when the average life expectancy was less than 40. Death was
a
regular presence in the community, and grief was respected by the
mourners who
came to help build the coffin and dig the grave, because everyone faced
these
losses equally. Though
we live
longer nowadays, the inevitability of death has not decreased in the
slightest.
The natural law of mortal gravity has not been rescinded, despite our
fantasies. But our facility for dealing with it certainly has. People
respond
to grief with aversion (which is hurtful to the griever), with guilt at
being
unable to resolve the suffering (inappropriate), with embarrassment
(awkward),
with sentimental pity (which doesn't jibe with the brutal reality of
grief),
and sometimes with outright avoidance. All
these
responses are understandable, perhaps, as expressions of discomfort or
awkwardness. After all, most people mean
well – don’t they? “You know, good intentions are no excuse,” snaps
Jill, when
I clumsily try to explain away her family’s clumsiness. It still hurts,
bad,
and the outrage she feels adds another layer of pain. Then
there’s the
best-case scenario – open-hearted acceptance, and the willingness to be
present. That means the willingness to say, “I don't know what to say,
but I
see that you're hurting, and I'm sorry.” Simply acknowledging your own
awkwardness in the face of grief can be an enormous relief to the
griever, who
then understands she doesn’t have to carry the burden of your
discomfort. All
it takes is a few sincere words. In addition, it can be helpful to find
some
concrete way of expressing your support – mowing the lawn, taking the
kids
bowling, stopping by on Tuesday evenings –
and continuing to do it for a good long time. Grief can
continue weeks
and months past the point where most people have stopped asking about
it, and
months and years past the point where life resumes its facade of
‘normal.’
While it softens over time, it’s never erased. Best not to have any
time limits
in mind, and no expectations. Above
all, don’t
think there’s a solution, because there isn’t. Grief isn’t a problem to
be
solved. It’s a wet and muddy emotion, a down and dirty gut-level
grappling.
Mourners in traditional societies shave their heads and tear their
garments,
coming together for ceremonies of ritual wailing. What do we do to
express our
grief? Not much more than turn on our headlights on the drive to the
cemetery! Wailing and torn
clothes don’t jibe with our preferred image of self-control. But control gets
us nowhere with the emotions. We’re not supposed to control them. We’re
meant
to dance with them, holding them lightly, following their lead in a
fused and
seamless flow of grace and passion. That’s
the biggest lesson grief – perhaps the biggest of
all the big
emotions – teaches us. |
2617 NW
Thurman, Suite 5
Portland OR
97210
503-525-1172