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What I know About Grief

6/23/2020

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How do we learn how to swim through the ocean of grief?  I don’t know of any instruction manual, checklist or roadmap that will help with a grief journey. For those of us who have experienced grief, we know there is no “end” to grief. The grief and the loss become a part of who we are.  Grief isn’t always a bad thing.  We grieve because we cared deeply for the person we lost.  And while we would love to have that person back, grieving their loss is better than never having them in our life at all.

Here are 5 things I have learned about grief –
  1. Grief doesn’t have a timeline.  Grief doesn’t have an expiration date.  We cannot calculate how long our grief will last. We don’t “get over” grief in 6 months or a year.  We will always grieve the loss of our loved one.
  2. A grief journey is not a step by step process.  You don’t finish one stage of grief to move on to the next.  I ran across this Ted Talk from Nora McInerny.  With honesty and humor, she tells her own story of grief.  Why we don’t move on from our grief; we move forward with it. Here is a link to her Ted Talk
  3. If your relationship with the deceased person was difficult, your grief might be more complicated.  Because of complicated grief, you might struggle for longer periods of time or have trouble returning to your daily life activities.  If this sounds like you, you may consider talking to licensed mental health professional. If your loved one was a client of CPS, you can work with one of our mental health partners.  Contact us at 419-423-0286 to find out more information on our emotional support services.
  4. You can talk about your loved one.  Don’t feel guilty if you want to share memories or stories about them. “We talk about them not because we’re stuck or because we haven’t moved on, but we talk about them because we are theirs, and they are ours, and no passage of time will ever change that.”  - Shivi Jasrotia.  You may have friends or family that feel awkward or uncomfortable around you because of your grief.  You are not responsible for others’ feelings.   Your grief is your own. 
  5. You can create a meaningful life while grieving.  Grieving someone and moving forward with your life is not an either/or situation.  You can do both – often simultaneously.  I chose another career path after I lost my husband to cancer.  Working with cancer patients and their families is the most fulfilling career I have ever had.  I would have never considered working for Cancer Patient Services before I lost my husband.  Working at Cancer Patient Services is an integral part of my grief journey.

Grief is hard.  Grief is messy. Grief makes people uncomfortable.  However, you can move forward with your grief.  You can find meaning after the loss of a loved one. You can rediscover joy in your life.

#grief #griefishard #griefjourney #cancer #complicatedgrief #cps #rediscoveringjoy 

​More information on grief:

https://www.apa.org/helpcenter/grief
https://whatsyourgrief.com/myth-grief-timeline/
https://www.cancer.org/treatment/end-of-life-care/grief-and-loss/depression-and-complicated-grief.html
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    Author

    Carol Metzger is CEO of CPS. After losing her husband and her mother to cancer, she gets the gravity of a cancer diagnosis. But, in working with CPS clients over the past five years, she also has seen happiness and friendship evolve out of the support and love we extend one another. This blog is a lot of Carol’s first and second hand experiences with people going through cancer, and she welcomes comments and feedback from you. 

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