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by Stella

How Do I Help A Grieving Parent?

August 13, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Fearless, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Purpose, Relationships, Spiritual Connection, success, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

 ”What can I do to help someone who has lost a child?  I get asked this quite often and although I have previously written some about it in my other blogs there are some additional things I would like to add.  In my own experience  many of my friends and family were great support, there were others however who either shied away from me as they did not know what to do or were worried they might say the wrong thing.   Some were hit and miss, they were often one time helpful and another not.  The following are some things you can do to better support a grieving parent:

Acknowledge that your friends child has died and the impact this has had on your friend.  Show interest in your friends feelings and worries.  Realize you cannot and do not need to make them feel better.  It is okay and healthy for either or both of you to cry.  Listen when your friend wants to talk and keep it confidential.  Try not to give too much advice because you feel helpless.  Your friend has all the answers and your job is to listen, reflect back and help them to find those answers from within themselves.

Admit you don’t know what to do for your friend.  Let your friend know you feel inadequate to help and do not know what to do and take their direction if you can.  If you feel overwhelmed by the intensity of it let your friend know why you need to take a break from it for awhile.

Learn what it is your grieving friend is experiencing. Read up on grief on the internet, check into books on grieving, talk with others that have dealt with grieving parents.  Understand that your friend may be tired, irritable, edgy, forgetful and have trouble focusing due to anxiety, stress and grief.  Realize that grief takes time and your friend is learning a new normal for him or herself.  You may sometimes see that your friend needs you and other times they may want to be alone.  Sometimes they will want to talk and other times be silent with you.

Help as and when you can- and realize small things help a lot too.  Meals, breads, cookies, errand running, phone calls, offers to take other kids for a bit and cards and notes all help.

Try and take things with a grain of salt.  Many grieving parents have not the energy  to be considerate or nice so try not to take words or actions by them  personally.

Grief changes a person and although some friendships deepen some drift apart.  Try and be open and accepting of change and grieve if you must the loss of the old friendship.

 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

Finding The Path Through The Bewildering Experience Of Loss

July 23, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Grounding, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

Parents who lose a child are often left feeling as if they have survived a catastrophe and are left standing at  ground zero with no clue as to where to go or how to begin getting their life back.  It is difficult to know what to do from where they are at and on top of it they are left feeling stunned and reeling from the intense feelings of loss and pain.  Our society I have found offers little help in this area and the things people tell us such as time heals all wounds and he’s in a better place anger, frustrate, and stir up  the anxiety and confusion we already feel.  What I was fortunate enough to have found is that there are tools we  can use that make a huge difference in how quickly and easily we are able to merge our lives before we lost our child with the life we have now without that child.  Although forever changed  we can learn to adjust and be happy again.   We can each use our own creative and intuitive abilities fine tuned to us to help us find the peace we need.  We just need to be taught how and my experience was that with a grief recovery coach I was able to learn not only what these tools are but was coached on how to use them.    Some of the help I found came from a book I read called:  The Infinite Thread: Healing Relationships Beyond Loss by Alexandra Kennedy.  In it she mentions 7 steps for the process of recovery.

 They are:

  • to express all the feelings over this loss: anguish, longing, relief, anger, depression, numbness, despair, aching, guilt, confusion, and often unbearable pain
  • to let the nonnegotiable and excruciating reality sink in that you will never again be in the physical presence of your deceased loved one
  • to review your relationship from the beginning and to see the positive and negative aspects of the person and the relationship
  • to identify and heal your unresolved issues and your regrets
  • to explore the changes in your family and other relationships
  • to integrate all the changes into a new sense of yourself and to take on healthy new ways of being in the world without this person
  • to form a healthy new inner relationship with this person and to find new ways of relating to him or her.

Kennedys book reinforced how it’s important to actively work to integrate and resolve our grief, not to just passively experience our reactions to it.  She states that, “Grief carries us until we learn to carry it.” Reading that phrase helped me understand that we do not need to stay victims of grief we can be survivors and even captains of our destiny again if we wish!

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

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

21 Things That Help Your Surviving Children When They Have Lost A Sibling

April 30, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Relationships, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEWhen my son died an additional hardship was deciding how to tell his sisters as well as how to balance my own grief along with supporting them in theirs.  The following is an excerpt from my diary and upcoming book “Grieving Joshie” by Stella Haight-Wichman

April 29th 2007 Going Home The police have just informed us that after almost 2 years of being missing they have found our son’s murdered remains.  Now while we reel from the news we must tell the girls, his sisters.

 Josh’s 17 year old sister is at their dad’s house.  He will tell her the news there while I break the news to his oldest sister 24 over the phone and Josh’s 10 year old sister at my house .

I call Josh’s oldest sister who is married and lives out of state.  Her husband answers and tells me she is gone for the weekend I tell him that her brothers remains have been found, that he is not coming back and that I do not want to ruin her weekend out with girlfriends so if he wants to tell her when she gets home or she can call me when she gets back and I will tell her. He says he will have her call me and that he is very sorry. 

How do I tell Tia his youngest sister who has mourned his being missing for almost 2 years as only a little girl could, openly and with much grief and confusion?  How can I tell her that her brother isn’t coming home again? How can I tell her that her brother is…dead?   Finally I just go ahead and tell her that the police have told us they found Josh’s body and that he is dead.  She looks stunned and then her eyes fill up with tears as she says “no” over and over as I hold her and she rocks back and forth crying.  Her heart has just been broken completely open as mine has.

 I am so tired.  So much has happened today.  I have had enough for one day, the rest will have to wait for tomorrow or another day.   We cry together into the night until we fall asleep together mercifully.

You must do the thing you think you cannot do.

ELEANOR ROOSEVELT

April 30th 2007 Back At Home

The next afternoon Joshs littlest sister  and I have a peaceful discussion about life and death. We talk about bodies being like dirty clothes encasing souls. I reassure her that Joshie will be like an angel watching over her. I tell her that she can talk to Joshie any time she likes, and that Joshie can hear her. I tell her that Joshies body is dead—but Joshie’s love is forever.  She says she doesn’t want me to ever die and I tell her everything living eventually dies but that I plan on living a long time.  She has a favorite book I gave her sister years ago called” Mama Do You Still Love Me?”  I remind her of that story and tell her that I will always love her for as many days as there are stars in the sky.  I tell her that all she must do when some day very far from now when she is an old grandma and I cannot be with her is look at the stars and know her mom is up there watching over her as her brother now is and that we  will all be up there one day.  This seems to answer all her questions at least for now. She quietly gets up from her bed and picks up the book she got for her brother at a garage sale right after he went missing so if I grounded him he would have something to do and says I guess i don’t need this anymore and hands it to me.  We both start crying again…

Later that day my oldest daughter calls from out of state and tells me she tried to call me earlier and found my line busy and figured I was probably  calling the rest of our family to break the news to them so she then says she called her dad and he already told her about her brother.  I talk with her more and answer as many questions as I can amidst our tears until she finally has to hang up…

 

The following are a list of things  that I and other parents who have lost children have compiled to help other parents when faced with the difficult task of telling their surviving children that one of their siblings has died.  My wish is that in some small measure it helps.

 

  • Tell them as soon as you can.
  • Less is more here so tell them in a simple straight forward manner being careful not to get to explicit.  They will ask more questions if they need to.
  • If they have a question you can’t answer tell them so.
  • Do not beat around the bush.  Tell them using correct words such as dead not sleeping.
  • Ask them if they have any questions either now or later to not be afraid to ask them.
  • Share how you feel as a means of role modeling for them.  An example would be saying I feel so sad that’s why I am crying.  This gives them permission to cry too.
  • Talk about the deceased child using their name it helps everyone to work through it faster. 
  • Be age appropriate when speaking to your child about their siblings death.
  • Talk about the many feelings that they and others feel when grieving, sad, lonely, depressed, teary, angry etc.
  • Read about sibling grief either in books, articles or on the internet to better help your surviving child. 
  • Read an age appropriate book on grief to your child to not only help them talk and understand but because it also tells them they are not alone in this situation.  That there are other kids who have lost siblings.
  • Tell them about the funeral , what happens and answer what questions they may have.
  • Help your child find ways to say goodbye to their deceased brother or sister. 
  • Talk about what happens to people after they die according to your beliefs.
  • Make it clear to your child you are there for them and the many questions they may have.
  • Talk about the memories you both have bad or good.
  • Keep on the lookout for bad dreams.  If they happen often talk about them.
  • Watch for changes in behavior both at home and at school such as: sleep problems, anxiety, eating problems, anger issues, troubles concentrating, clinginess, crabbiness, aggression, or fear.
  • Suggest doing something as a memorial for the sibling who has died.  This often is comforting!
  • If something seems to go on too long or seems to be too severe call a Professional such as a Certified Grief Coach or Therapist.
  • Give your child extra love, attention and physical contact.

 

This is by no means everything that might help but is only meant to be a guide to start you off in the right direction should you need it.

 

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 Rebalancing Of A Family After Child Loss

April 14, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Relationships, success, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEWhen my son was found murdered, indeed even after he went missing I found that my family and myself instinctively knew that we needed to get itself back into the rhythm and balance that was lost when our Josh was gone.  This feeling seemed to grow out of a necessity to not replace but to reorganize roles. I found that when your child dies there is a definite shift in the balance of the family and it helped for me to understand what needed to happen to again find that equilibrium.    

It seems that the role of your child which held parental hopes and expectations, and was as well the object of love and focus of your family’s attention, is an important one, and its absence is felt keenly by everyone.

I observed families are a lot like an organization.  They take on their own identity with their own characteristics and are more than the sum of their parts or in this case family members.  They do not merely reflect the individuals that are in it. 

In families it seems that when something happens to an individual it has an affect on the family and conversely if something happens to the family it has an affect on the individuals in that family. So for example when my son died I was preoccupied and withdrawn as I grieved at work and everywhere else for that matter which took my focus away from where it was usually therefore having an affect on others in the family.  And because my focus was drawn away our loss not only was felt by each one of us but in addition it was as if my family lost me as well as Josh.

I have learned that families which have experienced child loss also work hard at regaining the balance in the family they had before the loss and may not even be aware of the fact that they are making changes to accomplish this.  They may shift or change roles, rules, communication, expectations and behaviors to regain the equilibrium that stabilizes the family so it again operates consistently. There is no right way to achieve this as each family differs due to the uniqueness of its individuals. 

My older girls each pitched in and spent more time with their little sister after losing their brother.  They seemed to know instinctively that she would need that as he and she had been very close and spent a lot of time together.  My oldest started calling me daily which she still does after 5 years as she knew her brother had regularly called me or visited on weekends and summers while in college.  My youngest started turning into the family clown always trying to lighten things up when needed, which is the role her brother had filled in the family until he went missing.  These are just a few examples of reassigned roles and obligations in our own family as we tried to reestablish a balance in our family again.

This happened entirely of its own accord in our family as water will move to fill a void when it’s there.  Regardless of whether family balance is resolved healthily or successfully, the period of reorganization following a family’s loss I can say firsthand is very stressful.

I did find with other parents I have coached through grief that one must be careful of not doubling the grief for your surviving children by stealing their own unique identity by placing demands on them to take on the role of their deceased sibling. (Your brother was an accomplished basketball player and you should be too now) when they have no interest in basketball. 

On the other hand sometimes if a surviving child has been in the shadow of his sibling (an accomplished basketball player for instance) he may be able to step into the limelight and shine now.

Remember that this is such an explosive time for each member of the family and one member’s grief can trigger another. 

An accumulation of grief and pain in an individual or even in the family as a whole can trigger blowups.   On the other hand at times the family can draw strength from each other and gain support and solace.

Recognize the need to look at each family members needs and weigh them against that of the family at times.  An example would be everyone wanted to celebrate Christmas traditionally at home and I wanted to get away instead and so we celebrated out of town at my oldest daughters. It is important to strike a delicate balance so as to encourage healthy grieving and communication and unity rather than the opposite.  Compromise seems to be in order here as each person finds that the health of the whole family is the goal and that each family member will have situations come up that will take precedence.    

Remember that each family member does not have the same needs, grieve the same nor have the same relationship with the deceased individual.   There are personal differences which must be taken into account.  Individual factors are responsible for how each person will react to grief rather than similarity to others in the family or the fact that they all lost the same person in the family.

Lastly the very thing that helps which is the closeness of the remaining members of the family also can be the very thing that threatens to destroy the family.  It is easy when we are hurting to place blame, be angry, make false accusations, and place unfair expectations on those we need the most due to irrational demands or fear of upsetting another in the family. 

Although a huge undertaking the surviving family needs to reorganize itself to survive and must cope with the stresses of containing different grievers, each with different, unique needs. It is indeed a huge job and what is needed is patience, love, compassion and understanding.   

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

Do Men Grieve Differently Than Women?

April 7, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Physical Health, Purpose, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEHow long can I cry each day before I run out of tears? 

I remember asking myself that a year and then again almost two years into the loss of my 20 year old son when he went missing.  I continued needing to vent sometimes long and hard and sometimes softly and briefly daily into the third year.  Mostly at night, late in the bathroom, alone and screaming into the bath towel.  The tail end of the 2 year his murdered remains were found hastily hidden in some brush in a remote area several hours from where we lived in Montana.  At some point into that third year after he had been found the daily spontaneous bursts of tears became not always so daily.  Here and there I was surprised when I woke up and realized I hadn’t cried at all the day before and it struck me as just short of miraculous.   I do not know if it was because I knew where he was now and that knew no one could hurt him again.  Or perhaps I was finally resolving my grief and learning to integrate it into my life and move forward, but it had finally started for me, my recovery and a sort of rebirth of sorts of the new me. 

I visited about this throughout the three years with my family and took note of how differently we each grieved during the loss of our Josh.  The women in the family all talked of tears off and on for a period of time.  Some cried more and some less.  Some were affected by depression others simply sadness, some got angry, some wanted to talk and some didn’t want to talk at all about their loss yet alone mine.  Most of the men in the family showed little outward emotion.  They did however spend a lot of time by themselves either praying or talking to Josh.  Each of them seemed to throw themselves in their work as a means of dealing with the stress and the anger over his murder.    

Dr. Colin Parkes, Hospice Pioneer says that there is an “optimal level of grieving” that differs from one person to another. No two people—no matter their gender—grieve alike. There is no right way to grieve. Someone once said that we grieve as we live. If someone is a reserved stoic in life in general, that person is likely to grieve as a reserved stoic. If someone else finds it easy to express emotion in life, then that person will be more likely to show grief by expressing emotion. What is important is that grief be expressed. What is not important is the specific manner in which that expression occurs.

So do men and women express their grief differently?

Phyllis Silverman, who did important work on grieving at Harvard, points out that there is a “male model” of loss, in which one speaks of “learning to break away from the past.” Persons—and they might be women or men—who follow this “male model” prefer to “get on with life” and quickly involve themselves in work or other activities.

A “female model” of grief, however, emphasizes connection rather than disengagement and separation. Those who identify with this model are more comfortable saying, “You don’t break your ties with the past; you change your ties.” People—and this, too, can be men and women—following the “female model” are more inclined to display grief to others, reach out to one or more persons around them, and to talk more openly about the loss.

Those who tend to follow the male model will work hard to keep from breaking down in front of others emotionally, keep to themselves more and are apt to refrain from asking for help.  These people feel an importance in being independent or autonomous.  The female model stresses connectedness and being related.  What is important is that men and women grieve consistently with how they respond to things in life. 

Their different outward expressions can cause criticism towards each other as they feel the other isn’t feeling the degree of pain the same.  We must realize that we are each different and grieve in our own way and there is neither right nor wrong except for those that stifle their grief  or demonstrate an unwillingness to fully express grief in any form at all.  To do so is to set ourselves up for a lifetime of anger, bitterness, illness and a feeling of apathy or deadness or lack of joy for the rest of our lives.  It is important whatever our method of grieving be, to be able to integrate that loss so we can again feel engaged in life and happy.  That is our goal in Grief Recovery and that is the outcome of healthy grieving.

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

GRIEF RECOVERY CLUES THAT SHOW YOU’RE GETTING BETTER

April 2, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

 

ME 2 SEATTLEAs I have worked through my grief over the loss of my son, I found myself wondering if there were going to be recognizable clues that I would see that would let me know if I was making progress with my grief recovery.  I also know that it went agonizingly slow and that it seemed that for every good day forward where I felt as if I might survive this wilderness of grief it was most often followed by several steps backward into sadness, sorrow, anger and despair.

 July 13th 2005 I was abruptly catapulted into grief when my 20 year old son first went missing.  Almost 2 years later his murdered remains were found.   Initially I stumbled along the road of grief recovery and later with the help of a grief coach continued down that road at a quicker more purposeful gait.  What I wanted was clues that could help me see that I was making progress.  Markers that I could strive for and upon reaching would tell me that there was a light at the end of the tunnel and that my hard work was paying off.   That although things would never be the same I would be happy again.  

The list below is the clues that I compiled from both myself and other parents. These can be used by other grieving parents to give them hope and to see they are starting to make progress through their grief as well: 

 

  • You have come to terms with the finality of losing your child.  You understand that they are gone and can not come back to this earth.
  • You are able to think about the difficult memories as well as the nice ones.  Initially in grief it seems that memories are hard as they bring to focus how much you have just lost.  Now it seems easier and is comforting to remember.
  • You once again enjoy the company of just yourself and no longer need to distract yourself with things and people to keep you busy.
  • You can safely drive again without breaking down into tears because it is one of the few places you can be alone with your grief and vent even though you know how terribly unsafe it is.
  • You find you are less sensitive to other comments and are again able to see that some comments are simply made due to stupidity and are not purposeful attacks.
  • Holidays and special occasions are again something you look forward to whether or not they have remained the same or you have adopted new traditions.
  • You are able to take what you learned from the experience of losing a child to try and help others going through the same thing.
  • You are able to listen to your child’s favorite tunes without crying or needing to turn it off as it hurts too badly.  Now you may even be able to enjoy the songs as they bring happy memories shared with your child.
  • You finally realize that grief is not Permanent, Pervasive nor Personal.  It merely is what it is and just happens sometimes for no reason.
  • You can go to church without tearing up at some point.
  • You find yourself not thinking of your child as much or as long at one time.  At first you worry you are forgetting them.  This is not true though.  Instead you are giving yourself permission to move forward with your own life which is what your child would want for you anyway.
  • You are able to laugh again and be happy without feeling any guilt.
  • You find you’re eating, sleeping and other routines you once had are returning to what they used to be.
  • Your previous energy level is returning.
  • You find you have developed new daily, weekly, monthly and yearly schedules that do not include your child.
    You find you are able to concentrate on things again like a book or movie or TV show and can retain what you read or saw!
  • You find you no longer need to visit your childs grave as often or as long. 
  • You find you are again able to focus on and embrace the positive which was there all along but impossible to see.
  • You are able to again enjoy new people and develop healthy relationships with them.
  • You feel your confidence returning and know who your new self is.  You’re able to focus on and work towards your future again.
  • When you look into your eyes they no longer look like the wildebeests whose being attacked by the lion.  The shock is over as well as denial and anger mostly has given way to acceptance and understanding of your new reality.  This is not the same thing as condoning the death however.
  • You have adopted the attitude of “Why argue with the rain?”  You now understand that it will not change things.  Instead you look for ways to work around the rain or you may even choose to dance in it (for example I continue to make my sons favorite Birthday 7 layer bars on his birthday for his family even though I understand he will not be blowing out his candles or having a piece to eat.)
  • You find you are calmer about the grief bursts or grief attacks.   You realize they are happening less often and are less intense.
  • You find you are starting to look forward to waking up to your day again.
  • You find you have found others that fill the void in your life created when your child died.  You may also have found other activities as well to fill the space and find you are more so comfortable with the changes.  
  • The energy it used to take just thinking about your child and the time it took as well is now being used in other areas.  You may be helping other parents who have lost children or making other definite plans for your life.
  • You accept your new life and find that the experience of losing a child has led to new personal growth.

You realize you are starting to enjoy things again!  Flowers, music, sunny days, birds, the smell of coffee!!

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

A GRANDPARENTS GRIEF TIMES TWO

March 13, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Physical Health, Purpose, Relationships, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEI have had ample opportunity to visit with my own parents during our family’s loss of my son and had many a discussion with them as well as other grandparents about the potholes out there when traveling the road of a grieving grandparent. 

When a grandchild dies, the anguish of grandparents is doubled. Their grief for a son or daughter suffering this tragic loss only adds to the pain of the loss of the grandchild. 

When Grandparents outlive a grandchild this death seems out of order.  They often feel guilty for surviving.  Wondering why they couldn’t have died instead.  With the death of their grandchild goes the death of their immortality as well.  This idea brings them deep grief.

Grandparents also grieve the loss of their child, as they were before they were thrown into the grief of child loss.  They find they can not save their child from the grief as much as they would like to. They find themselves often in arguments and discussions leading to disagreements over things such as:

  • how grief should be expressed
  • how death rituals should be handled
  • the right and wrong way to grieve
  • how long one should grieve
  • individual reactions to the loss

 

These things can be like a minefield for grandparents to maneuver while watching helplessly the anguish of their child’s grief.

 

There are no guarantees, even in the best of relationships with their adult child and family there may be misunderstandings.  One of the most talked-about subjects in groups of bereaved parents is the lack of understanding from their parents.

 

Understand that Grandparents cannot protect their child from, or take away the child’s pain as much as they’d like to. 

 

The efforts needed by Grandparents to be on call to their adult child all the while watching their suffering is tremendous.  It puts an unbelievable demand on grandparents’ love, understanding, knowledge, and abilities—not to mention stamina.  No one expects to ever be in this position.  The emotional and psychological efforts seem unending and beyond endurance at times.  Even when finding some peace over the death of their grandchild many still mention the sadness they feel over the pain they see in their own child through the years. 

 

 Written below from a grief website is an excerpt written by Author Margaret Gerner who many years ago lost her 6 year old son and then years later her 3 year old granddaughter.  It is a good example of how terrible it is to not only miss your grandchild but the feelings of helplessness you have with your adult child which can be even greater:

I am powerlessness. I am helplessness. I am frustration. I sit with her and I cry with her. She cries for her daughter and I cry for mine. I can’t help her. I can’t reach inside her and take her broken heart. I must watch her suffer day after day.

I listen to her tell me over and over how she misses Emily, how she wants her back. I can’t bring Emily back for her. I can’t buy her an even better Emily than she had, like I could buy her an even better toy when she was a child. I can’t kiss the hurt and make it go away. I can’t even kiss even a small part of it away. There’s no band aid large enough to cover her bleeding heart.

There was a time I could listen to her talk about a fickle boyfriend and tell her it would be okay, and know in my heart that in two weeks she wouldn’t even think of him. Can I tell her it’ll be okay in two years when I know it will never be okay, that she will carry this pain of “what might have been” in her deepest heart for the rest of her life?

I see this young woman, my child, who was once carefree and fun-loving and bubbling with life, slumped in a chair with her eyes full of agony. Where is my power now? Where is my mother’s bag of tricks that will make it all better.

Why can’t I join her in the aloneness of her grief? As tight as my arms wrap around her, I can’t reach that aloneness.

What can I give her to make her better? A cold, wet cloth will ease the swelling of her crying eyes, but it won’t stop the reason for her tears. What treat will bring joy back to her? What prize will bring that happy child smile back? Where are the magic words to give her comfort? What chapter in Dr. Spock tells me how to do this? He has told me everything else I’ve needed to know.

Where are the answers?

I should have them.

I’m the mother.

I know that someday she’ll find happiness again, that her life will have meaning again. I can hold out hope for her someday, but what about now? this minute? this hour? this day?

I can give her my love and my prayers and my care and my concern. I could give her my life. But even that won’t help.

WHAT CAN YOU DO TO HELP YOUR GRIEVING CHILD? 

  • Encourage talking.  Let them talk about their child and their child’s death. This speeds up the healing process.
  • Allow your child to cry.  Crying and sobbing are all necessary means to working through grief.  It will pass and your child will feel better.  Try not to be disturbed by your child should she cry in front of others.  Your child is not there to take care of them.
  • Talk about your grandchild.  It tells your child you care.  It does not worsen things.  She is thinking all the time of her child as it is.  If it makes her cry realize that can be good for her.
    • Listen to your bereaved child.  The greatest gift you can give your child is to listen. Few bereaved parents have someone who will listen to stories about their child or to how guilty or angry they feel.  If you really listen, you’ll understand. Your child needs you to listen and needs you terribly.
    • Physically help your child.  The fatigue of grief is great!  Many have jobs and perhaps other children etc. to take care of while grieving and can use your help.  But always ask first.  Taking over without checking first can also produce stress for your child.
    • Take the surviving grandchildren for stretches of a day or even a half day.  This gives them a break away from the sadness in the home as well as a chance to talk with someone else about how they feel.
    • Physically hold your child.  There are times now as in the past that your child wants to be comforted.  A touch on the arm, a hug, a kiss, a tear or  to sitting near them while stroking their hair all are ways that you can actually feel like you are finally able to do something to help!

If you are a grandparent who has lost a grandchild, you have every reason to grieve deeply.  Sometimes there are no good answers for questions such as why did this happen?  Or what am I suppose to learn from this?  For now your job is to mourn this grandchild and take good care of your self as best you can.

WHAT CAN YOU DO FOR YOURSELF?

  • Look for support through groups, mental health centers, friends who have lost grand children etc. Read books and articles substituting grandparent for parent when necessary.
  • Be patient with yourself.
  • Don’t try to suppress your grief. Stoicism won’t work.
  • Select the relatives or friends who give you comfort, and tell them how you feel.
  • Don’t accept a comparison of your grief to that of others; grief is unique to each person.
  • Take time off from your grief occasionally.
  • Go visit a friend or take a short vacation at a place that you love.
  • Losing a beloved grandchild is a severe blow, but avoid thinking that life has no more to offer.

Some of the world’s greatest works such as music, writing and art came from personal tragedy.  Consider allowing them to comfort you and even possibly take them up as therapy for yourself either in studies or your own works.  Find your own ways to express your loss.  Find ways to fill the void in your life. If you have always wanted to paint, take up classes and possibly dedicate your efforts to the memory of your grandchild. Sign up as a volunteer for a local hospital or food bank. Helping others can strengthen the nurturing part of you that has been injured by this death. By putting your pain to work, the good that comes from it can heal.

When a great loss hits, we are numbed and life seems meaningless for a while.  But as time passes we begin to see that life is still worth living not just of others but for us as well.   Just as you loved your grandchild there are others friends, neighbors, even strangers who await your love.  For all the cruel twists in life it is still the only one we are given and you have every right to be a survivor and make the most of each day, each month, each year. 

So I invite you to consider starting right now!! 

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 Should You Say To A Grieving Parent?

January 15, 2010 in Acceptance, Communication, Compassion, Fearless, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Relationships, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 1 SEATTLEThis question comes up all the time?  People who have never lost a child just do not know what it is like. They often want to know what to say to help or what to say to ease their discomfort when encountering a grieving parent.

 As a parent who has lost a child and as a Grief Recovery Coach I know that what is said especially early on after the loss can make a difference in how hard and how long the parent’s grief journey is.     As both the parent of a missing child and as the grieving parent of a child who has died I encountered many awful and many wonderful things said to me.  Most of the time when someone made a remark or an ignorant platitude I realized they just did not understand, other times when caught off guard I was hurt and often angered.  Sometimes I recognized that it was I who was not receptive, especially in my early grief to many comments said to me.   

But I am of the belief that people as a whole are good and mean well and just need to be enlightened a little so below are some good examples of the worst and the best things to say to someone who is heartbroken.

Things not to say:

It will just take time, soon you’ll be over it, I know how you feel, It’s God’s will, you’re young you can have more, keep busy and you won’t have time to dwell on this, be grateful you had him for this many years.

 Things to say:

 My heart hurts for you.   I am here for you. I can’t imagine how you feel? Your world must be upside down? I don’t know what to say, what happened? Grief is a normal and natural reaction to loss, so what can I do to help? What was your son or daughter  like?  Tell me something about your child.

 One more thing to know when talking with a grieving parent is that we do not want to be fixed; it is our heart that has been broken not our head.  We need to own our grief at first as that is our connection still with our child whom we have lost.  We need the chance to feel our way through our grieving stages to heal at our own pace.   So please do not feel the need to hurry us along, instead acknowledge our loss, don’t ignore it or minimize the elephant in the room so to speak.  Know we need support while we are healing whether it is listening, help with tasks, time off from a job etc.  Realize that at times we need nothing at all said, that what we need most is someone to hold us tight when we need it and ask for it!  

 

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