Tips for Moving Through Grief
While trying to write an article for my August Blog, I experienced writer’s block due to low motivation.
I took some of my own advice I decided to reflect on my state of being through meditations on what I was feeling. (There is that “f” word again.) Next, I reread my previous blogs. I made the discovery that the tips I gave for moving through grief were only the bullet points of larger concepts that maybe only my therapist friends or personal clients might recognize. So, now, on the last day of August 2020, I am going to go into further detail on each of those I gave you last month.
Recognize it
This can be done by stating, “I am experiencing grief. Grief is the price I pay for Love and Loss.”
Don’t Rush It
Grief takes time. There is not a time limit on how long it should take to let grief move through my life, or let the grief move through me. This is part of the complexity of grieving. Sometimes it moves me, and sometimes I can move it. Sometimes the best that I can do is learn to coexist with grief over the duration of my life.
Don’t Judge Yourself
There are no good days or bad while I am moving through grief. There are only days, and each are 24 hours long. There are no negative or positive emotions, only emotions, i.e. Happy, Sad, Joy, Love, Fear, etc. I feel what I feel when I am feeling it. Those feelings do not make me as a person good or bad.
Don’t Try To Be Your Old Self
Don’t try to be too busy, happy or efficient. Do what you can do where you can do it. This is who you are for now.
Don’t Minimize It
One of the ways I minimize my own grief is to tell people, “I Am OK; I’m Fine” when I am not. When asked I tell them how I am that day. It changes from one minute to the next.
Don’t Try To Control It
I try to retain control by trying to hold it all together, trying to manipulate what is going on outside of me in the real world. I give myself time to feel what I feel internally then function in the outer world.
Pause
I take a breath. I am still and ask myself, “What is going on inside of me?”
Reflect
I think seriously about what is going on inside my mind and body and journal about it if I can.
Rest
I quiet my mind and body. This can be done by slowing down or sitting down. It is OK to take a nap.
Recharge
I find ways to restore, replenish and replace my energy. It can be done by limiting my activity, taking a nap or maybe reading a book.
Resolve
I analyze what I would like to do differently. What difference will I make in my life? What can I do and what is out of my control?
Be Curious
I try to be inquisitive. This is where I ask, “What can I learn from this and how can I use this learning? Why is this important? What are my losses?”
Rituals
I create and acknowledge an activities that are done consistently in my daily life. Some examples are: journaling, meditating, going for a walk at the same time each day and praying.
Connect or Disconnect with Others
I do this by going within and asking myself “Do I need to be alone or reach out to someone?” Then I follow through with whatever the answer turns out to be.
Remember It Is OK, Not To Be OK
I have had a major loss, and it is ok not to know what to do, how I will cope or if I will feel good again. I will just not be the same and the loss will always be a loss.
These tips on trying to move through grief are only tips. If you find they don’t work for you, give them up. If they do work, use them. Use them as a starting place, a diving board and/or a tool to help you swim through this process named grief. Please remember it is OK to be sad. You have lost something that you cared about and things will never be the same again.