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Reiki – Connection and Love

July 18, 2010 in Healing, Love, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing

I just got back from the hospital after seeing my new grandbaby, Easton, and his two moms.  The mom who gave birth to him had to have a C-section after a long night of labor when Easton decided to switch positions and couldn’t be delivered naturally.  It gave me great joy to be able to utilize my Reiki training to help ease Mom’s pain, and help her relax into as close to a state of sleep as she could get with 10 other people in the room.

What is Reiki?

Let me explain it as simply as I can.  Do you remember when you were a child and your mother kissed your knee when you fell and scraped it?  Or, when you were feverish and your parent placed his hands on your forehead and stroked your hair away from your face?  When you got older and experienced emotional pain at the break-up of a relationship, and someone you loved held you and rubbed your back?  Human touch gives us a feeling of warmth, peacefulness and healing.    It also makes us feel cared for and loved. 

Reiki is the ancient art of healing.  In Japan,  energy is called Ch’I or Ki, and means “energy, air, breath, wind, vital breath, vital essence…the activating energy of the universe”.  When an individual has been attuned in Reiki, this life force energy flows through them. 

People and animals are more than just the physical body that can be seen and touched.  We also have three levels of energy called Ki that determine the condition of the physical body.  What we are starting to learn in scientific circles is that healing cannot be physical alone, but must also include these vibrational levels of energy.  Western medicine treats the physical body, energy healing touches all four bodies. 

I believe, along with many Western trained doctors of medicine, that the mind, body and spirit determine a person’s health.   Our care team should be holistic in character  – made up of persons trained to provide us with loving care in all aspects of our lives.  Reiki is one option.

Georgia Feiste, owner of Collaborative Transitions Coaching, Inc., located in Lincoln, NE, is a life transitions coach, writer, and workshop facilitator.  She specializes in career, business and personal life transitions for people seeking change in their life.  Georgia is also a Reiki Master in Usui Reiki.  She is uniquely skilled in providing support and encouragement as her clients set intentional goals to attain their desires, holding open the space they need to stretch and grow. Her passion is success grounded in purpose and passion, standards of integrity and priorities in life.    Her website is http://www.collaborativetransitions.com, where she blogs about business and career, and http://www.rainbowbridgecoach.com , where she and many other coaches blog about mind, body, spirit and emotion.  Georgia can be reached at (402) 304-1902 or feel free to make an appointment with her for a 30 minute consultation by clicking on Automated Appointments.

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by Stella

Finding Your Point Of Power After Child Loss

July 16, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Vitality, Wisdom

Knowledge is power!  For those of us who are trying to muddle our way through child loss it seems that understanding  what is happening to us emotionally, mentally, physically and spiritually and taking action to help ourselves through, moves us out of the victim mode of the situation and into the take charge mode again of our lives, and this is our point of power !

 How many times have I heard grieving parents echo what I myself have said since losing my son and that is, ” I am tired of the lemons I’ve been given and ready to turn them into lemonade and get back into life again!”  When I finally reached this point of my own grief recovery after my son Josh’s murdered remains had been found after  2 years of being missing, I needed to know how others who had made it through this terrible loss had done  it.

 I read every self help book I could get my hands on, I read everything I could find on the internet, I talked to many who had lost their own children before me, then I finally stumbled upon a Grief  Coaching method  for moving beyond hurt and loss that involves a series of steps one of which is moving beyond yourself.   It combines the best of who you were before losing a child, the who you are after losing a child, and the need we have to heal.  It takes you beyond yourself into the world of compassion like you never have been before.  To utilize all you have endured, all you have learned, all you have sacrificed to help other parents like yourself who find themselves lost and in terrific pain.

 In getting to this step in grief recovery many parents I have met now help facilitate support groups such as SIDS, head organizations such as Suicide Awareness, speak at schools about the danger of drugs,  some are involved in politics as in MADD etc.   I choose to become a Certified Grief Recovery Coach working specifically with parents, I speak, do workshops and write.   There is  a poem that  helped to give me direction towards my point of power again when I was feeling lost after losing my son:

It is by Will Allen Dromgoole and called “The Bridge Builder”

An old man, going a lone highway,
Came, at the evening, cold and gray,
To a chasm, vast, and deep, and wide,
Through which was flowing a sullen tide.

The old man crossed in the twilight dim;
The sullen stream had no fears for him;
But he turned, when safe on the other side,
And built a bridge to span the tide.

“Old man,” said a fellow pilgrim, near,
“You are wasting strength with building here;
Your journey will end with the ending day;
You never again must pass this way;

You have crossed the chasm, deep and wide,
Why build you the bridge at the eventide?”
The builder lifted his old gray head:
“Good friend, in the path I have come,” he said,

“There followeth after me today
A youth, whose feet must pass this way.”

“This chasm, that has been naught to me,
To that fair-haired youth may a pitfall be.
He, too, must cross in the twilight dim;
Good friend, I am building the bridge for him.”

May this help you along on your own grief recovery journey…

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

 Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Learning To Cope With Pain After Child Loss

July 9, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Grief, Grounding, Healing, Knowledge, Love, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEWhen I was learning how to navigate the world and my new life after I lost my son, I read an article that helped me tremendously.  So much in fact I decided to base this blog on it!  The following is from Richard Marsh’s biography “Surviving Loss”:

 Coping and Catastrophic Change

  By  nature,  everyone  has multiple ways to  cope  with  any  problem.  While everyone has heard of the “Flight or Fight” alternatives, there are actually about nine methods of coping used  by people,  each  with a typical type of action  and  an  associated mental state.

  1.   Attack.  When faced with a problem, one may attack  it. 

 The action for this pattern is fighting and the emotion is anger. 

 Anyone who reacts to challenge and problems with anger is focused

 on this pattern of resolving conflicts and problems.

 

 2.   Fleeing.   When faced with a problem, a person can  run

 away  from it.  The action is flight, and the emotional state  is

 fear.  Many people run from their problems.

 

 3.   Denial.   The action is to ignore the problem  and  the

 emotional state is dullness.

 

4.   Dithering.   The  action associated with  dithering  is

 random response and the emotional state is confusion.   Dithering

 is also referred to in the literature as distracting.

 

 5.   Co-option.  The action associated with co-opting problems

 is  cooperation.  The general act is trying  to  reach  a

 participatory and collective action and the emotional state  is

 a cooperative one.

 

 6.   Analysis.   This response to stress or problems is to

 attempt to think through and understand the problem. 

The emotional state is usually curiosity.

 

  7.   Action.   This response is somewhat of the opposite  to

 Analysis.  It is “doing something, anything” and in many ways  is

 an  active  form  of dithering.  The emotional state  is  one  of

 extreme intentness.

 

 8.   Appeasement.   The general act is to just give  in  and

 the general emotional state is guilt.

 

 9.   Anguish.  This response is to give up and the emotional

 state is one of despair. 

 

      Whenever  there  is catastrophic change and pain,  the  mind treats  the pain as a signal that the current methods  of  coping need  to be changed.  The subconscious treats the pain  as  proof that  the current method has failed and forces a person to  begin to  try the methods over and over again until the pain  decreases and something is found that “works.”

  Persons  who have catastrophic loss will experience  all  of the above states and methods over and over again in their  lives, almost randomly, until the pain decreases.

  Thus,  if  a person were assaulted and robbed in  a  parking lot,  they would feel anger, confusion, guilt and a desire to  do something  (or  nothing) over and over again until the  pain  had healed.   The emotions and states would be applied to  everything in life, not just parking lots and banks.

  A  person who loses a child will suffer through  this  cycle for at least a year and usually for three to five years.  If they are  moved off track in their healing they can become stuck in  a mode for five to ten years or even for life.  One of the  worst things  outsiders  can  do is pressure grieving  parents  not  to resolve a mode or to attempt to force them to stick in one.

 Steps and Cycles

  It  is important to understand that these  steps  associated with grief and mourning can afflict everyone, not just those with ”serious” losses.  While these steps are caused by the constant cycling of coping mechanisms, these steps occur, to some  extent, in  every life when loss occurs.  While few lose  children,  many lose  jobs, friends and other hopes, and experience  portions  of the same steps.

 In  spite  of  it all, it is possible to  cope.   You,  your family  and others can all do things that will help you  make  it through the loss of a child (or other significant loss) in  shape to make a better tomorrow and able to care for those who  remain.  Always  remember, those who remain need you as much as those  who died.

 While I had read about the stages of grief written many years ago by the famous Dr. Kubler- Ross, and was able to apply them to my own healing.   I found that the 9 stages of coping with catastrophe found above carried me even further up the road to grief recovery.  I hope that in reading this many others find the help they need as well.    

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

I am the master of my fate…

July 3, 2010 in Healing, Spiritual Connection, Wisdom

Last night I watched the movie Invictus about Nelson Mandela and the South African rugby team. Twice in the movie, the poem Invictus was quoted, and it struck me how the last two lines of the poem speaks to the core of my beliefs and what I bring to my coaching. For those of you not familiar with the poem, the last two lines are:

“I am the master of my fate

 I am the captain of my soul”

We often speak of free will, and whether the choices we make in life are made consciously and with intention. Even when we are embroiled in situations that are full of pain and grief, how we handle them often determines the outcome. At least, our personal outcome. Stories that support this are told over and over by people who have lived through horrifying situations such as the Holocaust, political prisoners like Nelson Mandela, and individuals who have been told they are dying only to do so with incredible grace as they ease their friends and family through their own transition.

When I think of the choices made in reacting to these types of situations, I wonder why it is so difficult for us to make the same types of choices as we move through our daily lives. Why is it hard for us to consciously think about our reactions when we are confronted with a choice of anger or compassion; fear or understanding; non-judgment vs. condemnation?

Most of us react to people and situations without giving much thought to what it is we are reacting to. Perhaps it would be beneficial for us to stop and ask ourselves the question “What is it about this person’s actions and behavior that makes me feel the way that I do?” or “What is it about this particular situation that causes me to feel fearful, and is it real?”

When we believe we are the master of our fate and the captain of our soul, we understand who we are, and who we want to be. It is reasonable then to assume that with practice we will react less, look consciously for the truth of the situation, and take the appropriate action.

I wish I could tell you that this will happen overnight, but I cannot. This is a lifelong practice session, aiming for mastery of being and the growth of our soul. We have been given the free will to make the choices that will move us along our journey in all areas of our life. I wish you well as you take your first steps to consciously create the life you desire.

If you would like help moving forward with intention, please e-mail me to set up your free 30 minute initial conversation to see if coaching is right for you.

Georgia Feiste, owner of Collaborative Transitions Coaching, Inc., located in Lincoln, NE, is a life transitions coach, writer, and workshop facilitator.  She specializes in career and personal life transitions for people seeking change in their life.  Georgia is uniquely skilled in providing support and encouragement as her clients set intentional goals to attain their desires, holding open the space they need to stretch and grow. Her passion is success grounded in purpose and passion, standards of integrity and priorities in life.    Her website is http://www.collaborativetransitions.com, where she blogs about business and career, and http://www.rainbowbridgecoach.com , where she and many other coaches blog about mind, body, spirit and emotion.  Georgia can be reached at (402) 304-1902.

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by Stella

Child Loss Can Be Incapacitating

July 1, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, success, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLELosing a child can be and most often is incapacitating to varying degrees depending on the individual.  The definition of incapacity according to the Encarta Dictionary is: “A physical or mental challenge, making learning or performing basic tasks difficult.”

 In Learning About Grief from Normal Families:  SIDS, Still-birth, and Miscarriage, Journal of Marital and  Family  Therapy, 1991,  Vol. 17, No. 3, 215 it says, “the period of substantial incapacity normally lasts one to three years when a child dies, nine to fifteen months for a miscarriage.”

 Because  such a large part of incapacity is the loss of mental function, parents who have lost a child often are unable to properly measure the depth or level of their incapacity.  Many parents report that immediately following their loss, they lost the ability to stand, talk and think at the same time.   The mental effort required to keep their balance took more than they had.  At the time this was happening they were unaware of this incapacity they were suffering from and not until they looked back did they come to realize how impaired they had been.  What is important here is to understand that this is a quite normal and common response to child loss. 

 For caregivers, during the time right after child loss, understanding this concept should help in what areas you might step into to help the grieving parent.  Things such as driving, cooking, caring for other children in the home, errands etc.  Having been there myself as a grieving parent an excellent approach would have been “let me come be your friend/servant for the day so you don’t have to be worrying about menial things like driving or cooking so soon after your loss.”  Specifically suggesting rather than  generally asking “where can I help?”  Always the independent one when I was asked about where I needed help I resisted but later found myself in dangerous situations like going through red lights and leaving pans burning on the stove.  Thank heavens my guardian angel was obviously on overtime duty during the weeks following when my son was reported missing and again when his murdered remains were found.

 ”Unfortunately, in addition to reduced mental function greater financial obligations usually accompany loss” according to research from Counseling  Bereaved Families (Springer Publishing Company, Inc.) at 75-77. Thus the demands on your ability increase as your ability decreases.  Most parents report that due to medical bills, funeral bills and or inability to work they feel the stress of decreased income after child loss.  This in turn also causes additional stress and therefore has an even further incapacitating effect.

 Again the important thing here is that as a grieving parent one realizes that this is a normal and universal reaction to losing a child and that there is light at the end of the proverbial tunnel once an individual has done enough grief recovery work for themselves.  As I have mentioned before this can be done on one’s own but is most often faster and easier when done with a Professional Grief Recovery Coach like I and many other parents have or a Therapist.

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

                                                                  Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

How Many Children Do You Have?

June 11, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Grounding, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Relationships, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

 ME 2 SEATTLESoon after my son’s murdered remains were found I was filling out a form and came to the question, “How many children do you have?”  I remember feeling panic  at that moment at how to answer this question I had previously answered easily for over twenty years.  Logic said three girls but my heart thought no, that is not right, that seems  like denying my sons existence.  Next I thought,  I have three girls and one son, four kids, no, that isn’t right either, is it?

Losing a child was bad enough and now staring me square in the face was this awful question that I now realized I was going to have to deal with not only once but numerous times I knew for the rest of my life.  So I figured I might as well find the right answer for me for all those form questions and those individuals I would surely come across who would ask me as well.

In the beginning when I needed to tell my story of my son and how he had died I spoke in detail of how he had gone missing for almost two years and how and where his remains had been found as well as how his case was being pursued by numerous private, state, and federal agencies. 

As the months began to pass and I found I had told my story enough and the grieving process had begun to heal me I found I did not need to go into the details any more.  My needs had changed and so I rethought my answer.

Now I answer five stepchildren, three daughters and one angel son.  I consider who is asking and why and whether or not they are going to be a continuing part of my life to determine if I am going to go any further in my answer.  If so I tell them more so as not to feel as if we are dancing around the fact at hand of my son’s death.  I may also explain that my husband’s first born daughter also died of spinal meningitis when she was two, many years before I met my husband.   Better out in the open I figure, as it than loses its ability to interfere with the relationship.

If on the other hand the individual is just a passerby in my life than I  leave it at five stepchildren, three daughters and one angel son and seldom does anyone pursue it beyond that.   If they do or if they have follow up questions about my children I tell them that my 20 year old son went missing for almost two years and his remains were found at that point and the authorities are all in agreement of who did it and know who did it but it is still an ongoing investigation and they are waiting to make an arrest.  Then I tell them about my  stepchildren and daughters who are alive and well. This way I give them a chance to either acknowledge my son’s death and continue asking questions or ask about the rest of our kids.  Doing it this way usually keeps everyone, including me comfortable. 

 The occasional embarrassed individual I feel bad for but I see it as their problem.   Everyone is different when it comes to this question and no answer is a wrong one in fact my husband who lost a daughter in his first marriage along with his stepson (my son) answers seven children.  For him this is what works.   

Each of us has to decide what is right for us and then  simply say it.  In this way we strip the question of its ability to traumatize us, we take away it’s negative power and  it can no longer have a harmful affect on us.

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

                                                                                   Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

What Grieving Parents Want Professionals To Know

May 27, 2010 in Acceptance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEApril 29th, 2007-Today the police called and asked my husband Mike and I to come down again to the station and meet with Joshes dad and step mom for the umpteenth time. Little do I know that the rug will be pulled out from under me severely and quickly without any warning as it was 2 years ago when I was told that my 20 year old son Josh had gone missing. 

Upon arriving at the police conference room they told us that  my son had been found.  A moment of pure joy that was followed by the next comment b y the police,” his remains were found yesterday afternoon by some individuals in a remote area several hours away from Lewistown.  The area has been cordoned off and evidence is being collected.   

It takes all my strength and concentration to simply remain where I am under the continued assault of information.  Josh my son is dead.  I ask if they know what has happened and they say yes he has been killed and an investigation will follow.

These memories of that fateful day when I found out my son had been murdered will remain with me forever.  In my work with Grieving Parents I was surprised to find how many of them had similar stories and each of us talked of how we wished professionals were more adequately prepared for how to work with parents who have just gotten the news their child has died.  Below are some things that grieving parents would like to see professionals know: 

 Looking For Significance-What we are looking for in the midst of a trauma is significance. We need to know that our relationship to the patient is acknowledged and that we don’t have to relinquish our family position just because our loved one is in the hospital or has died.

           

 Need to be Informed-Obviously, it will not always be possible or even wise for family members to be with a patient during all life-saving procedures. However, we need to be kept informed. A liaison should be assigned to the family, someone who can explain what’s happening, someone who will represent the doctor and the family well. A liaison can also offer to call a pastor, chaplain, or friend. A liaison should also help provide privacy for the family, and most of all they need to be gentle. We have just been severely traumatized, our child has died or is dying, we are in a strange environment, and we are frightened. We need someone who will establish good rapport and establish our significance

 

Answer Our Questions-We will have all kinds of questions. “Is he conscious? Is he in pain? What happened? What are the medical people doing right now? Why is it taking so long? Will he live?”

 We need someone to explain  hospital procedures and answer  questions. A caring staff person who is well informed can go a long way toward preventing malpractice suits and most certainly promote goodwill between the hospital, the doctor, and the patient’s family. 

Parents are often so frustrated by the lack of answers by medical personnel that they feel a malpractice suit is often the only way to force an explanation of what happened and get answers to their questions.

 I have learned that families can handle an “I don’t know” or “I did everything I could” answer much more easily than a medical person’s refusal to answer or a medical person’s apparent avoidance of the family. When our questions aren’t answered by medical personnel, we are left to come up with our own answers and they may well be wrong.

           

 

Do Not Avoid Us-As medical professionals please do not be evasive because you are afraid of us and our questions.    Instead gather information and inform  when we ask.   Be aware of volunteers from bereavement support groups who can be called to talk with and/or sit with a family facing the death of a loved one.

 Do Not be Afraid to Show Sympathy- for fear we may “fall apart.  When we cry or show some other emotion, we are not doing so because you showed concern. We are doing so because someone has finally given significance to us and our situation and we feel it is safe to express our true feelings.

 

Allow us to Vent-It is helpful if someone shows enough concern that we know it is safe to express our feelings and our fears. Once we know it is ok to express our true feelings, the strong emotions usually dissipate quite quickly. However, when we sense it is not safe to show our emotions, we generally do everything we can to hold them in until some often insignificant situation arises and the top explodes off of our emotions like an exploding volcano.

 

Provide a Liaison-If a hospital can provide a caring person to stick with the family and even call and check up on them later, that will go a long way to create good will and positive attitudes between the family and the medical establishment.

           

 Educate Yourself- It is important that medical personnel become well versed in how to help families when things don’t go the way they had hoped. Don’t just read clinical material on bereavement; read articles and books written by bereaved people.

 

Don’t Let Us Leave Empty Handed – Gather information for us on support groups. Prepare a resource list of helpful books and articles. Hand it to us. Give us a card with the telephone number of a minister, grief recovery coach or counselor. Send us home with some books that will address our situation. Make arrangements to  have someone check on us periodically. I  was told a medical professional asked, “Well, what kind of time-line can we put on grief?” The answer to that question, “Everyone and each situation is different so grief takes as long as it needs to for each individual.” So please give us time, and  please give us permission to grieve.

 

                                                                                    Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Mysterious Things That Can Happen To Us While Grieving

May 21, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Perception, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEIn the parents grief support group I attended after I lost my son there was often talk of strange occurrences that seemed to happen to not all but many of the parents .    By strange occurrences I mean  things out of the normal range that are unexplainable and that seem to  follow or surround the death of their children.  The interesting thing about the discussions is that not one of the parents was spooked by the occurrences nor thought they were evil, witchy, satanic, or otherwise came from or led to anything bad.  In fact most parents seemed heartened by them feeling their child was connecting  to them in some way  as if  they were trying to reassure them that they were OK.

 There is one couple that I met who see butterflies in the strangest places and at the strangest times.  In fact they have finally built a butterfly flower garden in their backyard so they can sit there to enjoy it and through those butterflies feel close to the daughter they lost.   

Another  set of parents I know have had experiences with lights,  especially a certain lamp in their home going on by itself.  This started soon after they lost their son.  They feel it is a way for him to connect to them  from the  new realm he is in.  A way to say hello!  I am here and okay!  It gives them great peace of mind and reassurance that he is okay where he is and is still watching over them.

 Many other parents claim to see what is called an orb of light.  I round bright ball of light that is sometimes seen around someone before, during or after death.  We have pictures taken several months before my son died where there is an orb seen in the picture by him.   I was told by a number of parents in my support group they too had looked back at pictures taken of their child who had died and noticed these strange round lights near them.

Many of us experience some kind of unusual  occurrence when we are grieving.  Often we are embarrassed to talk about these curious events.  We wonder if others around us may think us crazy.  We are most certainly not though.  Many normal average people experience these sorts of things upon losing someone.

 For example my son’s greatest trouble with being employed once he was old enough to be, was his loss of freedom.  He told me once before he died that he valued his freedom more than he did money.  He would rather be poorer and be free to spend his time doing what he wanted with his friends and family than  have money to buy an expensive car, etc and lose his freedom by being tied to a job and the material things most people are.   Of course as his mom and the voice of logic I explained how you must get a good education and job so you have good insurance and pay for all that may come your way so life is easier for you and your own family should you have one.  We  had this argument through his three years in college and he frustrated me as he worked hard at school but not also at a job after school. He choose instead to live meagerl,y to keep his prioritized freedom  as opposed to working more and having more money for things.  Looking back I am glad he choose what he did.  Had I known he was going to be murdered I would of chosen the same for him so he could enjoy the time he had with friends and family doing the things he enjoyed to do.  Did he know or sense something about his life being short? 

As a high school senior he was not happy like I thought he would be about graduating when we talked about it.  I remember him telling me he wished he could do another year in high school as he liked things as they were and knew his freedom  would lesson upon going into college and beyond.  Again looking back did he sense something I wonder about what was to come?  He flat out told me several times in his life he did not think he was going to grow old.  Just a feeling he said.  Other parents who have lost children have told me similar stories about their own kids.  Do they sense or have a feeling about their untimely deaths?  

The day of his memorial almost two years after he had gone missing and again a week later when we scattered his remains I noticed a golden eagle above me in the sky.  In Montana that in itself was not odd.  Not only did  Josh love the freedom of Eagles but he had an Eagle blanket in his room on his bed.  Both of these days every time I looked up outside this golden eagle was overhead.  I counted 5 different stops the first day when that eagle was over me and a week later while we were out of town scattering his ashes  there was that darn eagle again.  When we returned home a second time that day I saw a golden eagle overhead and again later that day 3 more times before the day was over.  Ten times in all, five times each day!  By the third or fourth time I was saying “Hi Josh, I see you, thanks for being so close to us, it helps since this is so terribly hard to do!”  or later when I looked up “Hi Josh, love you too much, too!”  Inexplicably I felt each time that it was too often to be coincidence or my wishful thinking.  I felt as if I was being touched by either my son Josh, God or both when I needed it most.

There are many who have tried to find explanations for this kind of thing.  In science they call it the -Laws of Seriality and Object-Impact Interactions.  In physics-Implicate Order and Morphogenic Fields.  Many have written about -Synchronicity and those in theology tell of -Grace and a Higher Being.

 What I have found is that these mysterious events especially in our early grief are not to be understood so much as to notice them and reflect on them.  Noticing something unusual does not mean we are crazy.  We don’t always need to be able to understand something to be comforted by it or be surprised by it.  My belief is that these occurrences are meant to be respite from dealing daily with loss.  Often they stay with us for a long time if not forever.  They are gifts sent to us, moments to be honored.  Times when we realize that some things are a mystery and that there may be a presence we cannot explain.  As for me I have now come face to face with the fact that I can be affected by something even when I do not understand it and it can give me immense and lasting comfort. 

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

                                                                                   Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

The Overwhelming Grief of Sudden Child Loss

May 14, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Love, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEWhen I was told that my son of 20 years who had gone missing almost two years previous, had been found murdered I experienced many emotions.  I was extremely bewildered, felt anxious, was depressed and wondered if I had done something or not done something that may have led to it.  I had trouble continuing to lead a normal life as I had no time to absorb or prepare for the fact that my world as I knew it had ended and I was catapulted into one I did not understand.

The death of one’s child is painful no matter what the cause but in sudden death the ability to cope is severely diminished.  The sudden loss of a child puts the grieving parent into shock.  This kind of loss is so terribly hard that recovery is more difficult due to additional complications. The complications are that  the parents adaptive capacities and ability to cope are so severely hit that it leaves the grieving parents stunned and overwhelmed. 

There is no gradual transition time, no time to steady or ready or prepare yourself.  Sudden death places you between the way you thought your world would be with your child still with you and the way the world now is.  Your beloved child has died without even a warning.  This totally disrupts your ideas on what is to be.  It disrupts your beliefs in the world and of one’s own control in it.  When a loved one’s impending death is known ahead of time these issues are also dealt with but the difference is that they have had a valuable time period to place the death in the context of events that were predictable and made sense.   Even though they experienced pain they could see what caused the death.  They more than likely were given the opportunity to prepare for the death and to deal with their feelings about it.  They were given the opportunity to say I love you, to say good-bye and to do the things they wanted to do for their child before they died. 

There are many emotional demands and problems with any type of death of a child but at least when the death is known ahead of time the grieving parents have been able to focus their coping abilities towards the expected outcome.  For instance a child is diagnosed  with a terminal illness, even though the parents still must struggle with the craziness of their child dying out of order or before them it still is logical that when anyone at any age is stricken with a terminal illness the outcome is most likely death.  So the loss makes sense of a sort.

When a child dies suddenly the loss does not make sense.  There is no logical sequential explanation of what has happened that prepares them somewhat for the death.  The sudden death leaves the parents so stunned that they have a hard time even comprehending what has happened.  Accepting that the death even occurred is often difficult, and often takes quite a bit of time.  Parents will find themselves going over the story of the accident, suicide, or murder trying to make sense of the loss after the fact. Because they were not prepared for the death and it had no understandable context, they will try to deal with their lack of anticipation by putting the loss into a series of events. They may find themselves looking back at the time leading up to the death and searching for clues that could have indicated what was to come. For example, I remember trying to piece things together to figure out why my son was murdered, who had he been spending time with? had he made anybody angry enough to kill him?, did he owe anybody money? was he involved in anything illegal?  For me the answers were no and after repeatedly trying to make sense of the loss I still could not.  I found that sometimes people are in the wrong place at the wrong time, sometimes people trust the wrong people, sometimes the saying “It is what it is” is all there is to explain it.

This did not stop me though from trying to restructure the sequence of events by looking back in time leading to his death so I could feel a logical progression, a control and predictability and looking back some sense in what had happened. 

Holding yourself responsible however I found can lead to problems such as guilt.  For example I felt that maybe I should have paid more attention to what he was doing in college and who he was with there.  Knowing this I thought maybe  could have prevented it.  Eventually I rationalized though that when your child of 20 years is in his 3rd year of college 4 hours away and you see him once every few months it would be impossible and unhealthy for you to keep tract of everything  your child did and who he did it with .

The grief symptoms for parents experiencing sudden child loss tend to last longer and be more intense.  In addition to dealing with feelings of loss and grief a parent is trying to understand what has happened to them and is trying to cope with their drastically altered world. These parents have not only the same job as all mourners , but they also must cope with the extra stresses that leave them relatively more worn down and disadvantaged.

Losing a child suddenly gives us no chance to say good-bye, no chance to tell our child how much we love them or how much they mean to us.  This cause a lot of pain as we feel a sense of unfinished business.  We long for a chance to tell them things, apologize for things, explain things or simply let them know what they meant to us.

Parents who lose their child suddenly seem to talk of their shared loss of security and confidence in the world. We have been taught a dramatic lesson: Loved ones can be snatched away without warning. What is to prevent another similar loss from occurring in our future we may think.  Avoidance and anxiety eventually can lead to states of anxious withdrawal since the world has become such a frightening, unpredictable place.

The consequences of losing a child suddenly in some ways can last a lifetime.   For some parents this is evident as chronic grief, or persistent anxiety where security and confidence never totally return. For other grieving parents the consequences are less dramatic though still powerful.  An example would be my friends who have not lost children when faced with a spouse or child who is late in coming home will reason they have been held up by traffic or some other logical explanation and not worry unless they are terribly late.  Me on the other hand when faced with the same scenario will assume something terrible has happened.  I experience a lot of stress and have to mentally self talk myself out of the assumption and into a more logical non-disaster explanation.  Newer grieving parents to this may jump at calling the hospital or police.  After grief recovery coaching I learned to tell myself that the odds are on my side that everyone is ok and there is a reason for their tardiness.   I am however concerned.  I have experienced having a child snatched from me without warning and found that this sort of thing does not always happen to other people.

 With coaching though I learned that this awareness can also be turned into a positive:

  • I now make time for and prioritize my family and friends differently.
  • I do not put things off or wait to say important things to those I care about like I may have in the past.
  • I do not want to have unfinished business with anyone important to me because I now know that no one is guaranteed a tomorrow.
  • I now tend to live in the moment more relishing the small things I used to overlook in my hurry to get things done.
  • I choose my battles better and don’t get caught up in stupid matters that are trivial now realizing that my energies can better be applied to things that truly are worthy of my time and energy.

I appreciate life more now that I have experienced such a traumatic thing.   I did not chose this to happen but what I did find was that I could choose to pull something positive and meaningful out of such a tragedy.        

    Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Time Alone Does Not Heal Grief…

May 7, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEImmediately after I found out my son had been murdered people starting telling me “time heals all wounds”.  I am sure they told me this because they wanted to say something to make me feel better or because they had heard the phrase before and it seemed to fit or because they did not know what else to say.  I can honestly say that at first when you lose a child it seems like time is the enemy. The  impossibly long harrowing days blended into even longer agonizing nights of pain, loneliness and confusion make one wish that time could be stopped and even better reversed to a point when your child was still happy and with you.  Then there is the sudden realization that now that your child has died  you will never see him on this earth again.  That all you really have to hold onto if you are religious or spiritual is that  you will eventually be together again but you also soon realize that it will be a long time in coming and in another place.  And that thought puts you at odds with time as well!

What I did find out about time and healing is that although time moves along it alone does not heal.  Healing is an active process not a passive one.  When you have a wound and do not care for it properly, although it may scab over it often gets infected underneath, takes longer to heal and leaves a scar. 

When we lose a child we feel as though our heart and mind and very soul have been mortally wounded.  We eventually seem to heal up but if we have not cared for those wounds properly while healing then they too merely scab over closing off the infection beneath which greatly lengthens the healing process experts say  and can take according to (Time Magazine July, 1985) 5 to 8 years to recover.  Most generally as well this too can leave a bad scar.

The basic definition of to heal means to make whole again.  When we become sick something or someone has affected our wholeness.  To get back to wholeness we must either eliminate the thing that is affecting our wholeness as in taking antibiotics for strep say or we must integrate it so that we no longer see it as a threat.  Once we can do that it no longer has the same impact and we are free to heal and move on.  

A common factor among many grieving parents I found is that once they were able to create a shift in thinking and acceptance as if they had chosen their loss themselves they were free to move forward again into happiness.  And although not easy to do even when guided by a grief recovery coach or other professional this was necessary  to help them  heal.

Healing is thought of as a spiritual idea where as curing is a medical concept.  That is why it is an active process that we must participate in, it does not happen to us as in curing by a doctor.  As in the saying “Physician heal thyself” we must be active in order to heal from the wounds of child loss.  To do that we learn how to stay open and accepting  the very thing that wounded us. 

 

In Lamaze classes I learned to embrace the pains of childbirth and relax through them as I was taught to view them as  completely normal and natural physical and emotional responses to the birth of one’s  baby.  In doing so I was able to endure up to 20 hours of labor followed by delivery of a healthy baby together with a few stitches of some slightly torn tissue.  All this with no medication of any kind nor an episiotomy.  And I went home the next day!   

Lamaze as well as chronic pain management teaches one not to tighten up around the pain but to relax and allow the pain to be present.  The idea taught is that when pain is resisted it intensifies but when we relax and accept it, it can move and flow through us easier.  Pain is merely an alert that something is wrong whether it be something physical, emotional, spiritual or mental and all we need do is listen.  To relax and breath through it.  We do not want to fight it but learn from it.

Time alone does not heal but healing takes time.  To be healed we can give ourselves the time we each need to open to the pain and open to the loss.  As we do this we grow as we include more of what life holds.  We include what would have been lost to us if our hearts and minds had closed against the pain.  We include what would have been lost if we had not taken the time we needed to work at the healing we needed all along.    

 

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson