Grateful, yet Grieving

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The Cost of Loving

January 25, 2024 by Pam Luschei

Recently, I found a quote that resonated with me. “Grief is not a problem we are supposed to solve. It’s just a natural thing we will go through that needs to be validated and frankly better understood.” The quote is from Meghan Riordan Jarvis, a credentialed grief and trauma therapist. Her words are why I write this blog: to validate, educate, and encourage others who have entered the grief journey, offering hope and comfort to know you are not alone.

After my husband died, I devoured every book I could find. I read six books in the first six months. I ran to the Bible to search out the words that would give me something to hang on to.  After being in a state of wordlessness, I began to write as a way to process all the pain that comes with grief.

Our culture is not good with grief. Even the church is lacking in understanding grief and its impact on people. We do a better job preparing for earthquakes and tornados than preparing people to grieve. We can ignore, deny, pretend, and numb ourselves, but grief will find a way to let us know it exists.

We have placed expectations on grief and how it is to be managed. If we see it as a problem to be solved, it will inevitably be seen as something to be fixed. How do you fix what is not fixable?  Grief is the outcome of having an attachment to a person you loved. It’s to be expected if we live, love, and form significant relationships. We are wired for relationships.

C. S. Lewis puts it all into perspective in his famous quote, “To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact you must give it to no one, not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. To love is to be vulnerable.”

It will cost to love. But it’s worth it.

"Grateful Yet Grieving"

FREE ebook by Pam Luschei | Click HERE To Download

January 25, 2024 /Pam Luschei
2 Comments

Day of Rememberance

January 11, 2024 by Pam Luschei

Next Tuesday is my day of remembrance. It’s been six years since my husband suddenly died.  My journey with grief has taken on different dimensions as time has passed. Like inhabiting a house, grief occupies a space in my life. My “lived-in” grief is familiar yet surprisingly intrusive. It accompanies me when I find myself sitting at a table with couples and I’m the only single person. It slides its way into my walk with the dog, as I keep my head down while a couple kisses in the driveway. It hides out in the Costco parking lot when I see an elderly couple help each other out of the car.

It’s “lived-in,” as I see the days on the calendar offer memories of celebrations and places we visited. The photos that pop up on my phone poke at me with an ache and a smile as I remember the place where we were when the photo was taken. Life has continued amidst the abrupt stop where grief first made its appearance.

Each year that passes, grief takes an encore, where it arrives, steps on stage, and then exits. When I see the stage of my life, I’m aware that God’s faithfulness has sustained me and brought growth and change out of the worst experience in my life. “Before” marks how my life was, with “after” ushering me into a life I could have never imagined. God’s comfort and unfailing love are realities I live and experience on a daily basis.

Author and professor Kate Bowler eloquently says, “May I understand here the real work of life is found. Where it takes courage to live. Where grief can strip me to the studs and love can remake me once again. Where my heart can be both broken and keep on beating. Never sorry to have broken at all.”
(From The Lives We Actually Have)

Grateful for both the breaking and the beating. Grateful, yet grieving.

"Grateful Yet Grieving"

FREE ebook by Pam Luschei | Click HERE To Download

January 11, 2024 /Pam Luschei
3 Comments
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