I recently slogged my way out of a series of losses. Though I talked of grief overlays, or cumulative grief, I didn’t address how one might do the work of addressing the presence of it in one’s life. So, let’s talk about overlays, a cumulative grief. Ideally, one would experience loss, talk about it, think about it, sob with it, write about it, process it: Repeat. But what does one do when grief upon grief upon grief stacks one on the other? Was I weak to falter under the load? Shouldn’t I be sturdy enough having spent a lifetime perfecting resilience to find it now?
I ran aground early this summer over the loss of a location to house my SUP; it was the straw that broke the camel’s back. There had been a series of losses preceding this little one. When a new grief presents, it can bring back an old one that wasn’t fully attended to at the time. While I was reeling with my inability to extract one grief to scrutinize and work on, another one muscled its way in for attention. And then another, and yet another. This downward spiral picked up speed. Why couldn’t we keep living on the river that fed my soul? If only I had called the game one water balloon sooner, I’d have my eye. What could I have done better to avoid the disaster of my first marriage? How could I have protected my children better? Oh, hell, let’s throw in a lifetime of grief over who my parents were and what they did to their children.
I tackled it. It’s what I do, right? Get proactive. Pick up one stick in the pick-up-sticks pile. So, let’s take THIS one…grief of leaving the river. Um, we were lucky to live in that house on the river an entire decade. Right. We were. Just saying that brought a visceral shard of loss. The ‘something better will come along’ hasn’t. Not in the same way. I go back to the river like a homing pigeon. I SUP it to find what it gave me for ten years. It’s better than nothing. It’s. Better. Than. Nothing. I haven’t finished that one, or many of the other overlays yet, although I think I’ve identified most of them. (That’s half the battle right there.)
My mind functions quite rationally. It was an accident, my eye. We found a lovely home, just not on water. I can get to the water with effort. I would have needed more than a mentor to place my feet sturdily and healthily on the ground sooner but found my way there ultimately. I DID protect my children when I finally sorted out the need to and how to do it. And I found emotional health, and well-being.
So, how about grief, in all of us? It’s a unique process different for each one of us. There are a number of grief theories, all of which will tell you there is no shortcut, no instant cure. It simply takes time. Time to attend to each one. When they overlay in rapid succession, your grief process will be more complicated, but don’t panic! It is doable.
Here’s what I learned.
- Acknowledge your stacked griefs, the overlays. It’s half the battle and helped me feel a bit less inept in the juggling of which one I could handle right now.
- Having built resilience made coming out of the depressive nature of loss surer footed.
- Talk with someone. Heartbroken in the middle of my difficult journey, I relied on my profound sisterhood of women. I shared aspects of it with empathetic men of honor, all of whom lent me energy, wisdom, prayer, understanding and love. My husband has been my rock.
- Look toward your spiritual connection and lean into it. It might be prayer, or meditation, or exercise, or communing with nature. Rely on the strength you find within it.
- Any unattended loss and its accompanying grief will circle round again and again until you address that loss. That’s neither bad nor good; it just is.
- Grief is cyclical. It’ll give your heart and brain a break, and then pick back up when a thought, or circumstance, or picture, or smell or whatever else brings it to the front of your mind again. That’s okay. We cannot wish the loss away and make it so. It becomes another weave in the fabric that is us.
- If you’re on overload with your grief, be wise; seek help. Needing guidance, or a trained ear, or empathetic therapist is not a personal failure. Nor is it about our level of faith, therefore a spiritual failure. Or our strength of character, or ability to think something through, or whatever it is that holds one back from getting assistance. That’s an arrogance we can’t afford. We rely on physicians to help us through physical illness or injury. Relying on a professional counselor to help us emotionally, having sustained injury through loss makes perfect sense.
- Be kind to others who will grieve differently than you might. It was very hard to hear, “but that happened three years ago.” It did, of course, but hearing it said verbally (or in writing) implies I ‘should’ be ‘over it.’ Right now I’m involved again in the work of softening loss into a gentler memory, an imperative I cannot, nor should I, ignore.
- Your losses must be integrated into your life. This happens by dealing with them. All the stunningly raw buckle your knees emotions need to be given permission to be experienced. And though these emotions can be frightening with their intensity, making you feel as if you might fly apart from the inside out, trust that you are stronger than you think. You are.
I know that these losses, these experiences are now part of my history. Interwoven into the fabric of who I am. I am pacing myself back into “you’ve got this” mode. I have been known to say that we cannot forget trauma, we must build on the foundation of it. We also cannot ignore grief. It is there. If we do the work of it, and weave the threads of loss into our life, we are the richer for it. Wiser. I am sturdier today. And when next grief finds me, although I may not ‘welcome’ it, I will embrace the need to acknowledge its reality. There is no other way to find a measure of peace, and the beginnings of kinder memory.
Georgia Montgomery says
Eloquent wisdom, beautifully written. R and R, my lovely Lion Sister. Yes. We. Are.
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you. Yes. We. Are.
Louise Veuve says
Nice writing Laura. I, too know the loss due to health and really understand my losses just are! Good way to put it. I m sure that yesterday’s long sought MRIs of my spine were hours long rather than the one hour they said when stepping aloft the giant, shiny tube. One step closer to much needed neurosurgery. Another gain and loss too. We human “beans” hold our health tightly and ask God to help us as we age or accidents occur.
Bud West says
Another “gift” you give to all of us in your wrings Laura!
Your words – so well chosen and arranged.
Thank you!
CAROL J HIESTAND says
ahhhh…..i just wrote about grief up grief in my journal the other day. You words are gold here, for I have found the same thing — all of what you said. I will keep and share this post with others. thank you for saying it in a clear concise way
Laura Landgraf says
My heart to yours!
Joy D’Ovidio says
Dearest Laura,
Thank you for digging deep and sharing your wise words and insights of grief.
I just read your wonderful words and will keep your words and wise advice to weave the large threads of loss into a beautiful tapestry of my life.
I love you and thank you for all that you do for all of us to heal our souls and spirits
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you, Joy, for your kind words! Love you, too.