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CHANGING THE LANGUAGE OF GRIEF: A NEW CENTURY’S CHALLENGE
by Darcie Sims, Ph.D., CGC, CHT
We
need to create a new language for grief ... a language that speaks
honestly of grief’s pain and crushing despair. We need a language that
speaks of the painful promise and of the hope that is cast by the memory
of love given and received. We need to create a language of HOPE, not a
language of grief.
Perhaps we can create a language where DENIAL is merely a river in Egypt
and not a statement of despair or criticism. Denial is such a harsh and
inaccurate word. It does not belong in the language of HOPE.
When we are faced with difficult steps on our journey, we sometimes wish
to postpone our progress. We want to sidestep the painful step. Perhaps
we are not yet ready to deal with reality or perhaps we feel afraid,
unsupported, unskilled or unprepared to face the unfolding of a new
life. “I WON’T deal with it!” “I CAN’T cope with it!” I DON’T WANT TO
face it.” Words that each of us has echoed again and again as we
traveled the path of grief. And so, instead of facing “IT” (whatever
“it” may be), we wish to move it to the side, placing it just out of our
line of sight, slightly out of focus. For a time, sometimes, a looooong
time, we can keep whatever we do not wish to deal with, out of focus. We
can postpone reality, for a little while. It is easier to pretend, for a
time, that my child is away at camp or my spouse is on a long business
trip instead of facing the bitter reality of death. And yet, I KNOW what
it is that I am pretending. How could I ever forget?
I would like to replace the word DENIAL with the word POSTPONEMENT. It
is a more honest word. It accurately describes exactly what we do with a
reality we are not quite ready to experience. We simply move that
reality to the side, keeping it slightly out of focus, holding it there
until we are no longer able to keep there, or until we feel “ready” to
tackle the new reality. Before you can deny anything, you first have to
acknowledge it and once you acknowledge it, you can postpone it until
you are ready or able to cope. It takes a lot of energy to keep things
out of focus for very long and so eventually, most of us run out of
energy to keep things in FANTASY LAND. Slowly we bring whatever painful
reality we must face back into focus and we begin the healing task of
coping. DENIAL is a river in Egypt. It is NOT a lack of coping, but
rather an accurate and creative way of POSTPONING, until I feel more
secure, more skilled, more supported. Spring does follow winter and just
as the daffodils rise to greet a new season, I, too, will move from
postponement to acknowledgment and then to action. I, too, will, face my
despair and my grief, in my own time. So, as we exchange the word DENIAL
for the word POSTPONEMENT, let’s forever ban the word LOST. We use that
word to describe everything that changes. “I LOST my child.” “I LOST my
job.” “I LOST my spouse, my car, everything!” We lose THINGS: car keys,
houses, jobs, but never, never, do we lose people! They DIE or LEAVE,
but we do not LOSE them or the love we shared. Our loved ones have DIED,
but they are forever and always a living and loving PART OF WHO WE ARE!
We CANNOT LOSE their love! As long as we are changing the language,
let’s think about replacing ACCEPTANCE with ACKNOWLEDGMENT. Acceptance,
to me, means agree with and I will NEVER AGREE with what has happened to
me! But I can work towards ACKNOWLEDGMENT of what has happened. As I
begin to feel safer, more supported, more knowledgeable about the grief
process and feel more skilled at grieving, I can allow whatever I have
cast into POSTPONEMENT to resurface and begin then to resolve my grief.
We can change the words we use. Let’s make up a new language ... A
LANGUAGE OF HOPE! Move away from ACCEPTANCE and run towards
ACKNOWLEDGMENT! And then, perhaps we can change one more word in the
language of grief. Can we get rid of the word RECOVERY and use HEALING
instead? RECOVERY is a medical model word, designed to describe broken
bones, not hearts. We recover from a broken arm or the chicken pox. We
don’t GET OVER the death of someone we love. We get THROUGH IT, one
moment, one hour, one day, one hurt at a time. HEALING is a HOPEFUL
WORD.
There’s only one more word I’d like to banish from the world of grief
and bereavement. Let’s get rid of CLOSURE, too. There is no such thing
as closure in grief. The only thing that closes at the funeral or the
cemetery is the casket! Perhaps we can speak of closing a chapter in our
life just as our loved one closes a chapter in his life, but the idea of
ending a relationship just because death “got in the way”, is rather
silly. YOU DON’T STOP LOVING SOMEONE JUST BECAUSE THEY DIED! WE WILL
CONTINUE TO LOVE FOREVER. Those who have gone leave their footprints on
our heart; indeed, our soul. THEY ARE FOREVER THREADS IN OUR FABRIC,
MEMORIES IN OUR HEART, LOVE IN OUR BEING. THEY ARE NOW AND ALWAYS WILL
BE A LIVING AND LOVING PART OF WHO WE ARE!
Yes, in this new century, we do need a new language. We are diminished
by grief, replenished by love, held by hope. I want a language that
reflects that hope, a language that reminds me of the coming spring and
of the waiting dawn. I want a language that speaks to me of JOY
REMEMBERED, OF LOVE GIVEN AND RECEIVED, OF LIFE LIVED, not lost. Join me
in creating a new language that more accurately portrays the journey of
grief towards healing and hope. Healing doesn’t happen at all once not
does a language get changed quickly. Just as winter ebbs and flows and
the other seasons rise and fall on the tides of our emotions, the words
we speak will continue to dictate our journey. Yet, it seems more
hopeful to speak of postponement instead of denial, acknowledgment
instead of acceptance and healing instead of recovery. MAY LOVE BE WHAT
YOU REMEMBER THE MOST!
About the Author: Darcie D. Sims, Ph.D., CGC, CHT is the co-founder and
president of Grief Inc., a grief management and consulting firm in
Louisville, Kentucky. A bereaved parent and child, Darcie is an
internationally known speaker and author of several books, including Why
Are The Casseroles Always Tuna, If I Could Just See Hope, Footsteps
Through the Valley and Touchstones. She presents workshops, keynotes and
training programs all over the world on grief-related topics. She is
known for her warmth, humor and compassionate understanding She can be
contacted at Grief Inc. 9016 Taylorsville Rd. #181 Louisville, KY 40299
(502) 671-0535 (502) 671-0562 Fax Email at GriefInc@aol.com. Visit her
website at www.GriefInc.com.
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