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The
Deaths We Grieve
One of Life's Chapters, But not the Whole Story
A
number of years ago, a person whom I loved dearly was diagnosed
with terminal cancer. It struck him in the prime of his
life, and was a virulent form that killed him within three
months time of the initial diagnosis. Jack was a person
of deep faith, and he wasn't afraid to die - but he wasn't
ready to die. I was his priest, and he asked me many times, "Why?
Why would God do this?" I longed to be able to give
him a comforting answer - one that would give him some
peace and acceptance. But I had no answer. The last few
weeks of his life were weeks of extraordinary physical
suffering, accompanied by the relentless silence of God.
His burial and resurrection service was a celebration of
thanksgiving for his life, and for the way he had touched
the lives of the hundreds of people who had known and loved
him. But our experience of loss was profound, and our grief
could not adequately be expressed in mere words.
During a very difficult period in my own life, I made some unspeakably painful
decisions after years of wrestling with the issues involved. The consequence
was that people whom I loved were catapulted out of a world of safe familiarity
into uncharted territory, where nothing would ever again be the same. One dear
and concerned friend came to visit me. She told me of a period in her own life
when she had been so low that she would come home from work and go upstairs
to bed, often not even cooking dinner for her family. Finally, she went to
see her physician, who prescribed antidepressants, and from that day forward
she was able to cope with the stresses of life. The implication was that I
should do the same. I heard myself say to her, "Mary, I am the saddest
tonight that I have been in the whole of my adult life - but for the first
time in twenty years I am not depressed!"
A friend tells of a time in her life during which she experienced unimaginable
betrayal. Things had been done which could not be undone, and words had been
spoken which could not be unspoken. In all honesty, she could not deny her
own responsibility in the series of events that had brought her to this place.
But she felt as if she had stepped out into a world of unending darkness. Nothing
brought her joy. She lost weight. She was a person of deep faith, and believed
that what God would want from her was forgiveness. She prayed and prayed for
forgiveness to come to her, so that she could move on with her life, and let
go of the pain. But there was no release. She managed to get out of bed in
the mornings, and to move through the day doing what was necessary, but nothing
changed. She described to me the moment in time when healing began. "I
was sitting at a railroad crossing, waiting for a very long train to pass.
As I sat there, I had an image of what I had been doing. For the last year
I had been trying to outrun the pain, and thinking of myself as a bad person
because I was unable to get rid of it and move on with my life. It suddenly
came to me that I couldn't release something I had never allowed myself fully
to embrace. So I closed my eyes and imagined myself turning toward all that
had happened and opening my arms wide to receive it. It was a visceral event
that shook me from the top of my head to the bottom of my feet. It literally
took my breath away. But," she said, "from that moment on, the pain
began to lose its grip on me. It was weeks, even months, before I was able
to go a full day without thinking about the painful events of the past, but
eventually I was truly healed. The time came, in fact, when I discovered authentic
forgiveness, and was no longer a prisoner of my own pain and anger."
To feel is to be alive. To be depressed is only to exist. Grief is always associated
with loss, and loss is always associated with death in some form. The physical
death of a loved one symbolizes, at a certain level, all that was or that could
have been that is no longer. But there are other kinds of deaths. There is
the death of dreams - of ideals to which we have clung, but which we must let
go. This includes our longing for the parenting we needed but didn't get
- and fruitlessly seek out in other relationships, but cannot have because
others
are not
our parents. Our aspirations to be
model parents oursleves, and failures because of
our own wounds. The marriage we longed to have but couldn't because
of our own humanity and the humanity of our spouse.
There is no life without death, and the accompanying grief that is natural
to the experience of death in all its forms. But there is no death apart from
the possibility of new life and transformation. Depression is the result when
we identify with the pain in our lives as the whole truth, rather than as a
part of the truth. We cannot open our selves to life in all its fullness and
avoid the pain of death and grief.
The human experience of the apparent abandonment of God and the grief and
even despair that are a part of that experience are very real for many people.
Finding
the
courage to accept loss and death, and to enter into the grief they bring, is
a sacramental act that allows us to participate in the deeper truth that although
evil and death are real, they are not ultimate. Rather they are part of a larger
Truth that does not wipe away their consequences, but transforms them and brings
out of them a new creation.
The Rev. Senter Crook, M. Div.
Pastoral Psychotherapist
Samaritan Counseling
Centers
Copyright©2004 Senter Crook
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