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WILL I EVER STOP HURTING?
A PARENT’S GRIEF
Most of us
expect to bury our parents someday. We can accept that they
will grow old and die – that is nature’s way. But we do not
expect to bury our children. Having a child die before we
do seems to go against nature; to go against our sense of
what is right. Psychologists say that is just one of the
many reasons why the death of a child is possibly the most
difficult loss of all to accept.
“The
relationship between a parent and child is different from
any other relationship in the world,” says Therese Rando,
PhD, a clinical psychologist and author of Parental Loss
of A Child. “Parents who lose a child also lose the
hopes, dreams, and expectations they had for that child.
They lose parts of themselves. The child represents their
sense of ongoing life.
People who
have children often feel that being a parent is the most
important role they play in life, whether their children are
three years old, or thirteen or thirty. Therefore, the
death of a child is a tremendous assault on the identity of
a parent, Dr. Rando explains.
REACTIONS TO A CHILD’S DEATH
If your
child has died, you will likely experience several common
reactions of bereavement, but to a greater degree than
normal. You may go into shock or even deny at first that
your child has died. You will likely become depressed.
Even if you normally are a committed, caring person, you
could find that you don’t care about anything or anyone.
You may become preoccupied with the circumstances of your
child’s death, re-creating them over and over in your mind.
You may even have dreams or nightmares about you child – or
think you see or hear him.
The intense
grief caused by your child’s death can take a physical toll
as well. You may lose weight, have difficulty sleeping,
become irritable or listless, or feel short of breath.
Grief has even been known to cause hair loss.
But of all
the normal reactions to death, the two you may experience
most acutely are anger and guilt. Because the death of a
child is unnatural, there is an especially strong urge to
blame someone. You may be angry at the doctors or nurses
who didn’t save your child or at God for letting your child
die. If your child died because of some traumatic accident,
you may be angry at whomever you believe caused it. If your
child’s actions partly caused his death, you may even be
angry at him – and then feel guilty about your anger.
In fact you
are likely to feel guilty for many reasons. Parents often
feel terribly guilty simply for living when their child has
died. If you had an argument with your child or had to
discipline him shortly before his death, you may feel guilty
for not being “better” to him.
But perhaps
you will feel most guilty because you believe you should
have prevented your child’s death. You may find yourself
consumed by thoughts of “if only”: if only I hadn’t let him
go outside that day; if only I had checked on her a minute
sooner; if only I had been there.
A
FATHER’S GRIEF
Fathers
especially tend to suffer guilt over failing to prevent a
child’s death. While both parents feel responsible for
their child’s safety, men have often been taught that
protecting the family is their primary role.
Many
fathers also have a difficult time expressing their grief.
They may still believe on some level that “big boys don’t
cry,” or they may want to be “strong” for their wives and
other children. Unfortunately, this may keep fathers from
working through their grief and resolving it.
EFFECTS
ON A MARRIAGE
While
bereaved parents know they will experience intense grief,
their child’s death can have another effect they do not
expect: It will probably alter their feelings toward each
other. “The marriage will never be the same. It may be
better or worse but never the same,” says Dr. Earl Grollman,
author of Living When a Loved One Has Died and
several other books about death and grief.
Dr. Rando
explains that parents expect their grief to be similar
because they have lost the same child; however, “they’ve
each had a different relationship with that child; the
relationship the father mourns is different from the
relationship the mother mourns.”
As a
result, the parents may find it difficult to communicate.
“When one’s up, the other one’s down,” Dr Rando Continues.
“The husband may want to put up pictures of the child, but
the wife can’t take it. This puts a lot of stress on a
couple when they’re used to working together.” One parent’s
physical resemblance to the dead child can also cause
difficulties for the other parent.
The child’s
death often causes sexual problems within a marriage as
well. “One spouse may want to feel intimacy with the
other. But the other may not want the closeness, because
letting down the emotional barrier means feeling the pain.”
Sexual problems can last up to two years or longer after a
child’s death, Dr. Rando says.
COPING
WITH A CHILD’S DEATH
How can
parents handle the problems brought on by their intense
grief? “You need to find someone who can understand your
feelings,” says Dr Edgar Jackson, a psychologist and author
of You and Your Grief and other books about
death. Dr. Jackson who himself has lost two sons, urges
grieving parents to join The Compassionate Friends or other
associations of bereaved parents.
It is
important for parents to comprehend that severe grief can
make them feel like they’re going crazy. If you are afraid
your grief is out of control, you might consider asking your
clergyperson, doctor or funeral director to suggest a
counselor. If nothing else, you may be relieved to find out
your problems are normal.
Finally,
remember that other people will likely feel very awkward
around you because they won’t know what to say. You can
help bridge the gap by simply telling them what you need and
letting them know if it’s all right to mention your deceased
child.
TALKING
TO YOUR OTHER CHILDREN
Your other
children will look to you to explain the death to them. A
child’s question will depend on his age, but your answers
should always be honest. Don’t tell a child that his
brother or sister is “sleeping”; he will be afraid of dying
in his sleep. Don’t tell the child that God wanted his
sister; he will be angry at God and fear being “wanted”
himself. Simply answer the questions as they come, without
offering more information than is necessary.
However you
should assure young children that they will not die of the
same cause, and that they had nothing to do with their
brother’s or sister’s death. Young children sometimes
fantasize that they caused the death by being “mean” to a
sibling or by fighting with him.
Remember,
your other children need to resolve their grief. They will
take their cues from you, so give them permission to grieve
by letting them see your own grief. You won’t do them any
favors by “protecting” them from the grieving process.
A NOTE
TO GRANDPARENTS
Grandparents have the double burden of grieving for their
grandchild and seeing their son or daughter suffer pain.
Although you cannot take that pain away, you can still offer
your help in taking care of the other children, making
dinner and, most importantly, listening. Dr. Grollman
stresses, however, that you should not take over the funeral
arrangements – that is something your child, as the bereaved
parent, must undertake as one step in working through his or
her own grief.
And do not
neglect or bury your own grief even as you support your son
and daughter. You need to express your feelings as well.
This is a good time for honest talk with your family and
friends. |