Grief is NOT Self-Indulgent

I was looking at search terms people used to find this blog, and someone googled "I feel self-indulgent when I think of my deceased partner and I cry a lot." That got my ire going — not about her feeling that way, but at the way our society handles grief. Thinking about one's partner and crying are not wrong, but there is something seriously wrong with a society that makes the bereft feel self-indulgent for grieving. What the heck is wrong with crying? With grieving? With talking about one's grief?


Grief is not something to be shoved under the bed like a box of junk that you don't quite know what to do with. Grief is how we learn to deal with a world suddenly gone crazy, and tears are how we relieve the tension of that grief. I don't know how long this particular person had been dealing with her grief, but I'm at eighteen months, and though I've gone on with my life, I still have upsurges of grief and bouts of crying. Though these bouts have diminished significantly and I recuperate quite quickly, I'm prepared to go the distance, however long it takes. Some people say it takes a minimum of two years to get over the sadness and tears, some say four years, some say one year for every seven years of togetherness, some say never — that even after twenty years they still have times where the truth of their partner's death hits them and the tears flow.


Since mourning is considered by the uninitiated to be unacceptable behavior after a month or two, most people quickly learn to hide their grief. Grown children especially get irritated at tears, perhaps because they can't bear to see their once-strong parent brought low or perhaps because they think their parent is being self-indulgent. A friend of mine lost her partner six months ago, and her son berates her for being a drama queen. Such non-acceptance of a natural process adds more agony to an already agonizing time. As I said, there is something seriously wrong with a society that demonizes grief.


After my partner died, I asked the moderator of a grief support group how I should handle questions about my grief. I didn't want to bore people with my ongoing emotional traumas, but at the same time I didn't want to pretend everything was fine. I'd also been blogging about my grief but wasn't sure I wanted to continue since I didn't want to seem whiny and self-indulgent. She told me it was okay to tell people I was coping if I didn't want to go into details, but she suggested I continue writing about grief because people needed to know the truth of it. And I've followed her advice even though it was hard at times. I mean, after eighteen months, shouldn't I have gotten over it? The truth is, you never get over a significant loss — you learn to manage living without him or her.


It used to be that women hid their pregnancies, but now they flaunt their "baby bumps." Maybe it's time we brought grief out into the open so that the bereft do not feel as if they are self-indulgent for dealing with loss the only way possible — with remembrances and tears.



Tagged: grief, grief is not self-indulgent, loss of a life partner, remembrance, search engine terms, society and grief, tears
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Published on September 30, 2011 20:04
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