ROSENTHAL,HEALING SORROW(GRIEVING/LOSS)
WK OCT 26, 03 WC: 552
HEALING
SORROW THROUGH GRIEVING
Dear Neil: I wonder if you could write about the slow
ending of a relationship through a long illness. Thanks.
Grieving
in Wellington, New Zealand
Dear New
Zealand:
To say “goodbye” to someone is accepting that a connection has
ended. It means breaking the energetic
connection that keeps you tied together.
It is essential if you are to move beyond sorrow and have hope and
promise for your future.
Below is a list of common
emotional/physical manifestations of sorrow, taken from Peg Elliott Mayo’s book
“The Healing Sorrow Workbook” (New Harbinger).
Write a few sentences about how you experience each of them:
- Fear
- Anxiety
- Fatigue or exhaustion beyond what is expected from my
activities
- Confusion to the point where I don’t feel efficient
or able to conduct my life as I once did
- Helplessness.
“There is nothing I can do.”
- Guilt. “I feel
responsible for what has happened.”
- Taking your blessings for granted and feeling no joy
in them.
- Shame. “I feel
totally unworthy of the good things that have come my way.”
- Sadness. “My
mood is almost entirely dark and little amuses or intrigues me.”
- Having the impulse to do harm to another or take
revenge.
- Mistrust. “How
can I ever trust again?”
- Cynicism. “I
don’t believe in good motives or that things can possibly turn out all
right.”
- Isolation. “No
one’s company appeals to me, or I feel that I’m such a drag, I should stay
away from human contact as much as possible.”
- “It’s not fair!”
I am offended or outraged that such a loss could occur.
- Abandonment. “I
feel deserted, forgotten or disregarded.”
- Impotence. “There
is no influence I can wield that makes any difference. I am powerless and helpless.”
- Denial. “If I
just don’t think or talk about it, I won’t feel very much.”
- Chaos. “I have
no guides, no map, and no vision of what to do next.”
- Hopelessness. “I
think of my own death a great deal.
Nothing makes me smile, and I can’t imagine being happy, productive
or valuable.”
- I hurt terribly.
Mayo recommends that you write on
your intentions for your emotional
well-being into the future. Then include
your physical well-being, your intentions for your social life
(including
family and friends), your academic or intellectual life, your spiritual life,
and your intentions for the service you would
like to give to others.
- Then address the following questions thoroughly: To regain my physical strength and vigor,
I need to…; I will refresh my mind by engaging in interests such as…; I
will set the following reasonable, achievable goals for myself…; I will
actively reach out to several people in a social context by…; I will open
my heart to messages in my dreams, visions and fantasies that hearten me
by … .
If you pay attention to when a tree
sustains a wound, nature’s first response is to seal the injury with protective
pitch. Then new cells form to replace
those damaged. Does this analogy fit you?
==============================================================
Neil Rosenthal is a licensed
marriage and family therapist in Boulder, Colorado. Call him at (303) 758-8777 or e-mail him from
his website www.heartrelationships.com