Grief: Doing it Wrong?

For me, blogging has always been a way of sharing things I care about and connecting with folks. That encompasses everything from sexual assault issues to arguments in the SF/F community to just geeking out about whatever catches my interest in a given week.


Well, the focus of my life has been a bit different for the past ten months, and especially so since August 29. An awful lot of my time and energy is spent dealing with the aftermath of losing Amy. There’s paperwork — so much paperwork — and belongings to sort through and online accounts to clean up and close, not to mention the whole single parent thing.


And I’ve been immersing myself in that work, partly because it needs to be done, but partly because it keeps the grief from dragging me down… sometimes.


Maybe it’s my own background in psychology. Maybe it’s having spent almost 16 years married to someone with so much more experience in psychology and counseling. But I keep worrying that I’m grieving wrong.


I’ve attended three sessions at Ele’s Place, where I’m dealing with the most recent death in our group. Sometimes it’s helpful to be in a room with people who understand. Other times, someone will talk about a particular feeling — take guilt, for example — and I end up wondering why I don’t feel that too. What’s wrong with me?


I know everyone grieves differently. I know it’s ridiculous to expect my grief to follow the same paths and patterns as anyone else’s.


I also know grief is hard. I lost my wife and best friend. I lost my partner. I lost the future we expected to have together, all the hopes and dreams and plans… It’s overwhelming, and it’s tempting to lock it all away in a box and not deal with it.


I know that’s not the healthiest approach. It’s one of the reasons I wanted to start attending Ele’s Place, to force myself to face that grief, to work on figuring out how to live with it.


I keep questioning. Why haven’t I cried more? Am I just a cold, stone-hearted person? Is it because I cried so often during the nine months we were fighting cancer, and I’m just exhausted and cried-out?


I realized earlier this year that a part of me was grieving even before we knew whether Amy would survive. (And I felt guilty as hell about that, too.) In trying to understand what the hell was wrong with me, I discovered something called anticipatory grief.


Apparently what I was going through was kind of normal? But it means some of the wounds don’t feel quite so exposed. It’s been just over a month since I was able to talk to her, but it’s been almost a year since we were able to sleep together in our own bed. If grief is a path, I feel like my progress along that path skips around from one day to the next. It’s disorienting and confusing.


The biggest symptom I’m aware of is lack of sleep. I still have a really hard time getting to sleep at night. All the thoughts I’ve been too busy to deal with during the day come rushing back. I roll over and touch her pillow and remember snuggling up with her. I talk to her. I try to sleep, and after a half hour or an hour I give up and read for a bit or find something else to do. And then it’s 6:10, and the alarm is telling me it’s time to get up and get my son ready for school…


Part of me feels relieved that I’m not sleeping. It’s a reminder that I’m not stone-hearted, that I’m hurting and grieving just like I’m supposed to. But I also know it’s not healthy, and I’m trying to adjust things to help me sleep a little better.


I don’t know what I’m doing. There’s no handbook. One therapist says it’s good I’m keeping busy. Another points out that keeping busy is a way to avoid facing those hard feelings. I suspect they’re both right. Everyone grieves differently, and it’s a process that lasts years, if not an entire lifetime.


And I’m basically winging it. Trying to figure it out day by day, the best I can.


From what I’ve learned, that’s pretty much how grief works.

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Published on October 03, 2019 13:55
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message 1: by Sommer (new)

Sommer Perry I understand the anticipatory grief, my father had lung cancer and watching him waste away through all the chemo and meds was painful. I know I was grieving for him before he died. Cancer os a terrible thing. I really hope you can find a way to sleep, and that your son is able to as well.


message 2: by Julie (new)

Julie Czerneda If I've learned anything from my own grief over the years, Jim, it's exactly what you've said here so eloquently. It's different. Different by individual, different by upbringing, and most certainly different by circumstance. Losing my brother and mother just after we'd started our family was incredibly hard and I still grieve. My father slipping away with a smile, me beside him, after a long and happy life remains one of the most joyful moments of my own.
Grief is intensely personal, powerful, and important. Healing is too. Love and hugs.


message 3: by Kiri (new)

Kiri Salazar Grief will suck your marrow to the bone, leaving you feel hollow and brittle. After death, there is the demarcation of Before and After. Before she died. You going on After. But the mind is a funny thing. It isn’t always ready to step into the After. I remember wanting to tell my husband little things throughout the day and reaching to pick up the phone and call him. He’d been gone for almost a month and still I woke up every morning shocked by the emptiness next to me. The mind takes its own time to navigate the path to After. And sometimes it drags you back to Before with a simple nudge. I found life keeps you walking whether you want it to or not. Especially having a child. You may be an automaton for much of the rote work of living, but connecting with the ones who loved Amy should help. Peace to you and yours. In sympathy.


message 4: by Lisa (new)

Lisa I'm so very sorry for your loss, Jim. And reading this blog post your grief comes through in such an incredibly raw and gut-wrenching way. It brought me to tears. Wishing you peace and comfort in any way you can find them.


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