As I held the phone to my ear, listening to the sounds of the ICU in
my father’s hospital room as he lay dying, I thought, This is the hard
part. This was the part that I’d prepared my heart for, the inevitable
day that we all knew was coming after my father’s diagnosis of
esophageal cancer nine months prior. Every chemotherapy setback, every
hospital admission, every missed family gathering had led us here. We
knew cancer was going to rob us of our father and my kids of their
grandfather.
He was dying, and his cancer-ridden body would finally be at rest.
I was 1,600 miles away and helpless to do anything but whisper to my
father through the phone I clutched in my hands as I sobbed.
When the nurse got on the phone and said, “It’s over. He’s gone,” I breathed a sigh of relief.
My father was at peace.
The worst was over, I told myself.
But my grief journey was just starting. And it’s been excruciating, painful, and wonderful, all in different stages.
Though it’s been five years since the day I said goodbye to my
father, I still grieve him every day. Not a day goes by that my heart
doesn’t feel the pang of sorrow when I want to share a professional
success with him or when I catch a glimpse of his smile on my son’s
face.
I am not over my grief, and I never will be.
And I’m grateful.
Grief is not an emotion that is fleeting like anger or sadness. Some
say grief is a process, but I disagree. By calling grief a “process,”
the implication is that there is an end. A final moment where you say,
“Yup! I’m done now. I don’t miss my dad anymore.”
But that is simply not the case.
My grief is here to stay, and I’d appreciate it if you’d stop asking me to get over it.
In fact, if I’m being honest, I like who I’ve become since I’ve had
to process my grief over my father’s death. Grief has made me a better
friend when my friends have lost their parents. Through my experience, I
know that doing a friend’s laundry during a crisis means more than any
lasagna you can shove in their fridge. And I know that funeral flowers
just wind up dying and in the garbage, so I show up with wine instead.
Grief has made me more empathetic to strangers. I don’t judge as
quickly when a cashier is short with me or when someone cuts me off in
traffic because I wonder if they are having a day like I did shortly
after my father passed away. The day when I had an anxiety attack in the
parking lot at the grocery store and had to abandon my cart because I
was crying too hard to lift the bags.
The man who screamed at me that day for not replacing my cart can rot
in hell as far as I’m concerned. People who are carrying the burden of
grief aren’t wearing T-shirts that say, “Be nice to me, my sister just
died.” I’ve learned to practice kindness more often, thanks to grief.
I know not to tilt my head at a PTA meeting and say “How are you
doing?” to a friend who has just lost her mother. Because I know she is
fucking falling apart, and and it’s all she can do not to break the
school windows with the gavel in her hands. Rather, I say “Death fucking
sucks” instead. Because it does, and I needed someone to say that to me
in the early months. Grief has stripped away my social filter and has
made me braver, bolder.
On the day my father died, I became part of a club that I didn’t know
existed. The “I’ve Lost a Parent” club members quietly and bravely
carry their pain as they go about the business of raising kids, chasing
job promotions, and managing a household.
The members of this club wearily welcome new members by simply
saying, “Me too,” and I’ve been welcomed with open arms. The friends who
have shared their experiences and the ones who haven’t judged me for my
anger as I’ve navigated my grief path are the people I try to emulate
when I’m offering support.
You will never hear me say “He’s better off” or “It was God’s plan”
to a friend who tells me she is hurting from grief that threatens to
swallow her whole. My grief has taught me that sitting in silence with a
friend as she cries or the simple act of saying “I see your pain” is
what will really make a difference.
Simple gestures like showing up to take care of carpool when you know
a friend is struggling or arranging to show up with a hot meal for her
family says that you understand where she is in her grief. Grief has
made me understand that actions really do speak louder than words.
I didn’t ask for grief to enter my world, and watching my father die
was absolute hell. But for all the sadness and pain, the days when my
heart hurts so bad that I think it might actually be breaking, I
wouldn’t trade my grief for anything.
Grief has been a gift in my life because it causes me to feel deep,
raw emotion. And those feelings remind me that cancer didn’t erase my
father from my memories. Yes, death fucking sucks, but through the
tapestry of memories and a whole lot of tears, my father feels closer to
me than ever, thanks to the grieving process.
So stop asking me to get over it. I don’t want to get over it.
By: Christine Burke
Source:scarymommy.com
Full Article & Source:
Losing a Parent Is Hell, So Stop Telling Me to 'Get Over' My Grief
People handle different things in different ways. Some move on, but other's can't. That's ok. We all have to get through the day.
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