This blog follows on from a blog I wrote last year, Beluga.
I have often heard it said that when a loved one dies, the grieving process takes time. And that, over time, the hurt and loss diminish.
I have often heard it said that when a loved one dies, the grieving process takes time. And that, over time, the hurt and loss diminish.
I don’t
think that is true.
Losing a
loved one impacts on every single aspect of one’s life. Nothing is left untouched, nothing is left
the same. Every single thing that one is
at the moment of bereavement is irrevocably damaged. Time passing does not heal, does not repair,
does not lessen the impact that the loss has had on every aspect of one’s life.
Rather, it
is life that moves on and grows. Imagine a
circle. Inside that circle is every experience,
every piece of knowledge, every memory that one has ever known or encountered.
When a
loved one dies, every single thing inside the circle is changed. One’s view of everything to date is altered.
But as life
moves on, as time progresses, the circle widens and widens and widens, with new
experiences, new people, new memories.
These new encounters are not altered by the bereavement. So, as one grows older, the proportion of one’s
life that it is related to and changed by the loss of a loved one grows smaller
and smaller. All of the hurt and pain is
still there, but it is diminished in its presence.
I think
this is why people, places, objects, songs and so much more have the capacity
to bring back grief like a wrecking ball.
Where those aspects of one’s life that existed at the time of loss come
back into view, they carry with them the permanent connection to the lost.
It is why
so many people who suffer the loss of someone special change so many aspects of
their lives, from careers to friendships.
But some
reminders are inescapable. One such
reminder is the calendar.
The
anniversary of a death is a potent reminder of loss.
This is why
I approach October with an increasing sense of absence. On 29 October 2013, Alastair died. I miss him so much. This year is the fifth anniversary of his
death. I cannot stop thinking about all
that he would have experienced, all that he would have been.
Since his
death, I have, where at all possible, avoided contact with those we knew in
common. Avoided the places we used to
go. Allowed new experiences to widen the
circle of my life in order to have places in my mind to go to that are not
destroyed by losing him.
This is not
to say that I do not think about him still.
I do. All of the time. And often I enjoy to dip myself in memories
of him, thinking of nothing else, celebrating our relationship.
On Monday,
I will sit alone in my garden and think of him, of how much I loved him, of the
things we used to do, of the crazy things he used to say and, most of all, of
his smile.
As Monday
approaches, I ready myself for the inevitable wrecking ball, but also the
warmth and love that will come over me as I remember his life not his death.
This is beautifully written Mark. The pain never dulls, it is just shadowed by more of life that has continued on. I lost my father from a sudden death in November 2005 and had to rummage through his briefcase to sort out all sorts of administrative issues at the time. I can never open that briefcase without turning into a teary wreck. Over time I have learnt to celebrate his life and all that he achieved.
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