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The Cruel Trick of Grief

On May 12, 2000, Adam Petty, grandson of famous race car driver Richard Petty, was killed instantly when the throttle of his race car stuck and sent him head-on into a wall. He was 19. A few days later, while being interviewed about the tragedy, Adam’s father, Kyle, stated, “I hope I never get over it. I pray every night that it hurts as bad tomorrow as it hurts today because that way I know I’m as close to him as I always have been.” Does this sound familiar?

I have a question for you: What if tomorrow you awoke to find that all (and I mean all) of the pain you’ve been feeling from the death of your loved one was instantly gone? How would you feel? Relieved? Comforted? Calm? Perhaps at first. However, as the days and weeks wore on, many people might begin to experience a strange feeling that something was wrong. Why is this? Let’s examine what may be going on here.

During the time your loved one was alive, you had thousands upon thousands of experiences of places you went, talks you had, and things you did together. Because our reaction to death causes intense pain, which in turn causes grief, pain and grief become integrated in the brain cells containing the previously pleasant memories of our loved ones. Later, whenever we even think about our loved ones, these previously comforting thoughts may now bring pain and grief. Therefore every memory, which before had produced positive emotions, now is coupled with pain and grief. Here is a sketch of the process:

Death pain grief memories pain grief.  Furthermore, for many bereaved people, as the pain and grief begin to slowly subside, the memories of their loved ones may also begin to appear to slip further into the distance. If this happens to us, it can create a panic reaction—a feeling of losing our grasp of our loved ones. To combat this, we seek ways to hold tight to our loved ones, which—because our memories are now tied to pain—include holding tight to one’s grief. In light of this, the heartfelt comment from bereaved dad Kyle makes perfect sense. Why give up the pain if it means further losing your son?

However, what we all know about grief is the following fact: with time, the pain subsides. For many of us, the pain and ensuing grief may never totally disappear. A wise bereaved mom, whose son had died 20 years prior, once said to me, “You know, Bob, grief is just a sign of unfinished love.”

We also know that, contrary to what was preached by so-called experts a few decades ago, the majority of bereaved people do find ways to create some type of continuing bond with their deceased loved ones whether it be by visiting a special place, wearing jewelry or clothing, carrying a favorite picture or trinket, or keeping a cherished item. The challenge for us all is to find a way in our grief journey to gradually let the pain subside without dreading that, by letting this happen, we are somehow “losing” our loved ones.

As you know, there are multiple ways to keep our loved ones close to us. When my sister Lori’s husband, Jeff, suddenly died last year from leukemia at age 52, my son Shawn, Lori and I spent hours and hours in the days leading up to the memorial service creating a DVD of his life with pictures, videos, and music. Now, in her grief, whenever she wants, Lori puts the DVD in her player, gets her box of tissues ready and watches it. Some would say that she is torturing herself. But those of us who know her realize that this is one of her ways of staying connected to a man whose love she still feels after 27 years of marriage.

I don’t have to tell you: grief is complex stuff. It can impose a cruel trick on us all. It begins when death barges into our lives and takes our loved ones from our physical grasp. It then leaves us in pain, which in turn causes a multiple array of grief reactions. Finally, because our memories are all we have, the recollections easily become blended with our pain and grief.

Do you remember the first time you laughed? The first time you forgot to do something that acknowledged your loved one? The times when your pain was not the white-hot, gut-wrenching ache of grief? Did you also feel the memories slipping? In contrast to the wish of Kyle Petty, your job is to slowly but deliberately work to understand that letting go of some of the pain does not mean that you are losing the memories of your precious loved one.

You can overcome this cruel trick by doing all you can to compile and retain lasting memories of this wonderful, amazing person whose love will never die. By now you’ve likely heard of the many ways that you can keep your loved one with you still: creating a picture album, writing the person’s life story, planting a tree, giving to others in your loved one’s name, building something, producing a video, making a quilt. As you gradually experience the many levels of diminishing pain while simultaneously strengthening the memories, you will find that, despite this sad loss, you are getting a little better—which is exactly what your loved one would want. Don’t you agree?

 

 

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