
As I researched this grief business (and believe me, it is a business), one of the first things I
came across are the so-call ‘stages of grief’.
Some say there are 5 stages some say there are 7, I’m going with 5;
that’s enough for anyone, and way too many for some. Although they are listed in numbered order,
it is said, (and I am living proof) that they do not come to individuals in any
specific order. Take a look:
1.
Denial- First reaction to the crisis,
rationalization, a defense mechanism to shock
2. Anger- The intense emotion is
deflected from our vulnerable core, redirected and expressed instead as anger. The anger
may be aimed at inanimate objects, complete strangers, friends or family. Anger
may be directed at our dying or deceased loved one
3. Bargaining- The normal reaction to feelings of helplessness and
vulnerability is often a need to
regain control–
4. Depression- Two types of depression are associated with mourning. The first
one is a reaction to practical implications relating to the loss. Sadness and
regret predominate this type of depression. We worry about the costs and
burial. We worry that, in our grief, we have spent less time with others that
depend on us
5. Acceptance- Reaching this stage of
mourning is a gift not afforded to everyone. Death may be sudden and unexpected
or we may never see beyond our anger or denial. It is not necessarily a mark of
bravery to resist the inevitable and to deny ourselves the opportunity to make
our peace. This phase is marked by withdrawal and calm. This is not a period of
happiness and must be distinguished from depression
That’s
a real menu of pain as far as I’m concerned (menu of pain, I’ll have to
remember that line…). Now, I’m sure some very smart people spent a lot of time coming to these
conclusions; no doubt many a study was made and I don’t doubt the validity of
them. I’m listing these here only as a
reference to gauge my own experience. It
is said that these may not come to any one person in any particular order and they may occur more than once during
the process. Some folks may go through all of them, some, only a few, it is different for each person. I can only
speak of the items that I can truly say I’ve dealt with or have at least had
some personal measure of. First to
Denial, I don’t think that happened to me, when we received the diagnosis it
was to real to deny. In front of us stood
a real doctor telling us about a real disease that had real consequences and laying out a
prognosis that could lead you to any or all of the next 4 items on the list. My personality dictates that I face things as
they are, no sugar coating, no Vaseline…so I couldn’t deny what I was hearing
or the implications that came along with it.
I believe it was the same for Donna; we never denied the situation that
faced us. Our main concern at that point
was how do we deal with it, where do we go from here.
Through all of our conversations from that
point on, I can honestly say denial did not become an issue. We didn’t have time for denial.
As time passed and the illness became part of our everyday life (that sounds terrible…), we tried to face the various questions that arose with
honesty. Donna: ‘what about my car…’,
Me: ‘don’t worry ‘bout it’. Donna: ‘what
about the house…’, Me: don’t worry ‘bout it’.
Donna: ‘what about__________(fill in the blank)’ Me: ‘don’t worry ‘bout
it’. I was not being flip or disregarding
the practical aspects of our life, I meant really,
‘don’t worry ‘bout it’. With what we
were facing, the everyday considerations fell to the bottom of the list of
priorities. What I wanted her to do was
to concentrate on herself, period. Those
other things would be taken care of. I
wanted her to know that from this point on, it was all about her.
I needed for her to know this.
Now, her personality was that of a nurturer, she had always been the one
to take care of everyone else, so mainly thinking of herself first was
unnatural to her. I on the other hand,
having much experience at being selfish, tried to give her pointers, tried to help her
understand that the time had come for her to consider herself, first.
Gradually some of the pointers took hold and
a slight personality change occurred in her, I like to think it helped her to
carry on for as long as she did. It’s
not that she became a selfish person, that wasn’t in her nature, but I think
she did get the message that as we went through this, she was responsible for
how she felt, she had some control on how this illness could affect her. The illness was going to do what it was going
to do, our control of that was limited, but how we handled it, was up to us, up to her.
We didn’t have time to wallow in denial, we had to live the best way we
could for whatever time we had, and we believed that we could only do that by
facing head on what was in front of us.
As I’ve mentioned before, up until the last month, Donna did just about anything she wanted to. I did all I could to ease the mental stress I knew she must be going through, and I think I helped. At one point she said ‘ I don’t mind leaving, it’s just that I hate leaving you and the kids…’, I told her that I would go with her; when she realized I was serious, she was horrified, who would take care of the kids (mind you, these ‘kids’ are well into adulthood), the grandchildren would have no ‘grandma’ or ‘grandpa’, no, she didn’t want me to come with her…again, her nature, thinking of others first. I'll be honest, the kids and grandchildren, and anything else never crossed my mind when I made that statement. My concern was what she wanted and if she would have said yes, come with me, I would not be struggling with these words now...but she was too caring and unselfish to have me go with her.
As I’ve mentioned before, up until the last month, Donna did just about anything she wanted to. I did all I could to ease the mental stress I knew she must be going through, and I think I helped. At one point she said ‘ I don’t mind leaving, it’s just that I hate leaving you and the kids…’, I told her that I would go with her; when she realized I was serious, she was horrified, who would take care of the kids (mind you, these ‘kids’ are well into adulthood), the grandchildren would have no ‘grandma’ or ‘grandpa’, no, she didn’t want me to come with her…again, her nature, thinking of others first. I'll be honest, the kids and grandchildren, and anything else never crossed my mind when I made that statement. My concern was what she wanted and if she would have said yes, come with me, I would not be struggling with these words now...but she was too caring and unselfish to have me go with her.
No, there was no denial
for us and I’m glad we did it the way we did.
It allowed us live out in the open, no mistaken glances, or
undercurrents of BS. So too in this
grief, there can be no denial for me; I
have to face each and every emotional obstacle head on. I cannot deny the pain that goes with the
sense of loss, I cannot deny the fear of facing the future without her, I
cannot deny the fact that no amount of wishing and hoping, no amount of anger, none of my attempts at bargaining, no degree of depression or
acceptance will make happen what I want to happen: to have her back and
healthy. Just ain’t gonna’ happen. I
think for the time being I’ll pass on the next four stages. I'm too angry to bargain with depression or acceptance, I may have to
revisit them at a future date, but for now I’ll let them rest.
What I know to be true is that I miss my baby and always will; learning
to blend my ‘old life’ with the ‘new life’ is the greatest challenge I have
ever faced, that focusing on having memories without the pain has to become an integral
part of my life; those are the facts that I can’t deny...
.
Pax
_____________________________________________
“I carry your heart with
me (I carry it in my heart) I am never without it (anywhere I go, you go), my
dear…” -eecummings
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