"The death of
a parent is a shattering experience, wounding us and flooding us with
powerful forces. The boundaries of our world are torn away, and suddenly
life seems bigger than we might have imagined, terrifyingly bigger. A
parent's death can shatter us, leaving lifetime scars, or it can shatter
our limits sense of our selves, opening up our world into new dimensions.
For the latter to happen we must be willing to take a journey through
grief, following what may often seem like a long, dark passage that will,
in its own time, open out into vast new worlds."
From Losing a Parent by Alexandra Kennedy
Ten
Steps to Grieving the Loss of a Parent
The death of
a parent is a life-shaking event for which few are prepared. This experience
can wound us deeply, leaving lifetime scars. Or it can, if grieved fully,
initiate profound, unprecedented change and open our world into new perspectives
and choices. The following steps to grieving the loss of a parent (whether
recently or in the past) will tap this transformative potential.
- Acknowledge
the importance and power of this event. The death of a parent shakes
the very foundation of our lives. It is natural, though often uncomfortable,
to feel raw and vulnerable, alone, out of control. Rather than resisting
the powerful forces activated in grief, learn strategies for moving
through it, stage by stage, day by day.
- Take time
each day to honor your grief. Set up a sanctuary in your home or
in nature, a protected place where you can open fully to your grief
for ten to twenty minutes every day. Using the sanctuary, gradually
you will find a rhythm of entering the grief for a period each day,
then letting it go and attending to daily tasks.
- Address
any unfinished business with your parent. It is very common for
unresolved feelings toward your parent to surface after his or her death.
The grieving period is an important time to heal these old wounds and
begin to say good-bye.
- Participate
in creating new family patterns. The family system is often thrown
into chaos and upheaval after a parent's death. Old patterns don't work
with the same predictable results. The family may thrash around for
months, seeking a new balance with one another. This is a brief window
of opportunity, when the family is opened up to change before a new
system is established. You can either be thrown into this new system
or consciously participate in creating new patterns that are healthy
for you.
- Explore
the direction and quality of your life. The death of a parent often
initiates a period of painful questioning: Where am I going in my life?
What do I really value? What are my beliefs? Does my life really matter?
This questioning is a critical part of the grieving process. Out of
it will come new perspectives, directions and choices.
- Don't
pressure yourself to "get back to normal". Many expect that grief
will be over in a few weeks or months. Grief has its own rhythm, nature
and timing that resist our attempts to control it. For some, though
certainly not all, there is a marked shift around the first anniversary
of your parent's death. However, as the years pass, the grief may well
up from time to time. Each time it surfaces, see it as an opportunity
for more healing.
- Learn
to parent yourself. Give yourself nurturance, love, protection and
encouragement. Clarify the expectations you had of your parent that
he or she never could fulfill. In seeing the relationship for what it
was rather than what you wanted it to be, you can grieve what your parent
didn't give you and begin to appreciate what he or she did give you.
- Let your
friends know what you want and need from them. Offer them some suggestions
of ways that they can help and support you-- perhaps bringing you a
meal, doing some errands, giving you a back rub, taking a walk with
you, checking in on you regularly. Assert that your need to withdraw.
Let him or her know about anything that he or she is doing that is not
supportive. Encourage your friends to educate themselves about grief
so that they will know what to expect. Remind them that grief takes
a long time to heal.
- Each year
acknowledge the anniversary of your parent's death. Take time to
reflect and do something special to commemorate that date. Be gentle
with yourself, as this is a vulnerable time in which many may feel depressed
or emotional.
- Celebrate
the changes and new perspectives. These will begin to manifest in
your life as you move out of the dark middle phase of grief. When you
feel ready, act on new ideas, inspirations and insights.
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