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The sanctuary is the nurturing womb where you are cradled as you grieve. Here you have the opportunity to work with the intense forces and emotions that have been aroused in grief. The first step is to find and establish a sanctuary; whether it is in your home or in nature, it must be a quiet place where you will not be interrupted. You may want to set up an altar where you can place pictures of your parent, special objects, candles or flowers. What you choose will change over time. After you have prepared your sanctuary, set aside a period of time each day to be there. Like many of my clients, you may initially feel some resistance to sitting in your sanctuary every day. It is difficult with all the stresses and demands of daily life to set that time aside. However, this is a critical step. Start with ten minutes if you need it, and build from there as you experience the benefits for yourself. This is a special time, devoted to your grief. It is important that you not be interrupted or pulled away. Put on the answering machine or take the phone off the hook; put a note on the door. Protected from outside disturbances, you are now ready to open to the experience of your grief.
At first you
may dread the time alone, for this is often a frightening experience during
grief. The death of a parent does make us feel excruciatingly alone in
the world. If even for small periods you can open to the experience of
the aloneness, entering into its very heart, you will find in the dark
space of that inexhaustible void a way back to a source of life from within.
It is at this source that you come upon the resources to move through
the passage of grief and ultimately to transform the experience into a
healing. Sanctuary Exercise
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