Permission & Death through the Holidays: Choices and hope for navigating grief
DR. TRICIA GROFF (PHD)
Engaging High Achievers at the Cutting Edge of Psychology, Business, and AI-Human Dynamics
Each November and December, I find myself in the center of two conversations: setting boundaries and dealing with death. The themes haven’t changed since I was 25 years old. Now, I? help people navigate the timelines of year-end close on financials instead of turning down holiday parties…but the theme of overwhelm and boundary-setting remains the same. People struggle to manage an influx of new expectations when they are already fatigued. They think they should be responsive and accommodating with a perpetual smile, so they seek my permission to say “No.” Hence, I spend a lot of time reassuring people that they are not bad bosses, employees, friends, partners, siblings, or parents if they disappoint people as they try to manage the juggling act while keeping their sanity intact.
Similarly, the theme of dealing with death has not changed even as I've shifted from counseling to executive coaching and advisement. Unfortunately, business strategy doesn’t protect us from death. Hence, I’ve found myself writing each year to give support to the people who have lost bosses, employees, friends, partners, siblings, parents, and children.?
Celebrating Holidays After Loss - Challenging Cultural Norms of Grief
This year is a little different. I want to give permission to parents who have lost children to celebrate the holidays if they wish to do so, and for those around them to support their happiness. A couple of years ago, I wrote a poem for parents called “Please don’t ask me to celebrate.” It was in support of parents who found it excruciating to feel pressured to put on a happy face for holiday festivities. The contradiction of that writing and this one is not lost on me. Here is the backstory.
I discovered a problem this year, and I promised I would help to solve it. Someone who had lost a child told me they wanted to address the grief process differently than the messages the culture offers (i.e. your life is over, and you will be sad forever.) They wanted to heal and live in a way that celebrates life. Yet they couldn’t find support for this perspective. Everyone insinuated that they were either in denial or assumed that they would be depressed, divorced, and in grief for the rest of their life.?We had many conversations in which we strategized approaches that fit their desire to actively pursue healing on their own terms.
Different Approaches to Grief at the Holidays - You have the right to choose.
When I wrote the poem called “Please Don’t Ask Me to Celebrate,” I missed something.
I missed the fact that some parents may want to celebrate the holidays as much as others want them to be over as quickly as possible. I missed the fact that healing, choice, and personality differences result in different emotional needs, even through dealing with the death of a child. I’m choking on this as I say it, but what I’ve learned is that even other parents who have lost children don’t have the same emotional experience as each other, and sometimes the assumption that everyone feels the same way is especially harmful and isolating.? So…once again, I want to give permission.
Rights for the grieving parent during the holidays:?
How to Support Those Who are Grieving at the Holidays and Beyond
I understand the feeling of helplessness when people we care about are hurting from tragedy. We want to solve the problem, but deep inside, we know we can't. It's hard to know what to do or not do. We intuitively understand that each person has different needs, but that knowledge adds confusion and complexity. Here are some starting points to support people who are grieving over the holidays and throughout the year.
General Guidelines to Support Those Who are Grieving
Specific Tactics to Support Those Who are Grieving
So to friends and family, I give you permission to be human, to get it wrong, and to feel awkward as you try to figure out what to say or do. I ask that you risk caring because caring helps with healing, even if it’s messy in the middle.?
Reprint: Please Don’t Ask Me to Celebrate
Please don’t ask me to celebrate
Don’t you understand? My heart is gone.
And so when you ask me to decorate the tree,
I miss her laughing under it.
And when you ask me about my shopping list,
I think of all of the presents I won’t buy.
When you ask if I’ll make the Christmas cookies,
I only think of his favorite ones.
Please don’t ask me to celebrate
His face won’t be on our holiday card
I won’t hear her voice, squealing with excitement
Or feel him hugging me, hard.
My son, my daughter, my heart is gone.
领英推荐
And the swirl goes on.?
The lights, the glitter, the flurry of motion
That used to make me smile, and plan, and enter the season
It reminds me
That my child won’t be here this Christmas,?
Or next Christmas,?
Or? the next one.
Please, please don’t ask me to celebrate.?
The Celebration.
The tree sparkles, and the sound of wrapping paper echos,
My tummy hurts from too many cookies, and everyone is shouting over the music.
And I miss you.
I wish I needed to buy you a present this year
And for a moment, the slideshow erupts in my head, of all of the holidays past
When you’d show up late, steal desert before we started,
And pick on your sister, just to get a reaction.
I can feel the warmth of the family around me,
And I’m so glad that I can feel their love.
I couldn’t imagine surviving here without you,
But I’m still standing, I’m finding joy, I’m happy.
I remember your smile and how proud of me you’d be right now.
I glance at the mantle and note your stocking...it’s empty.
Then I come back to the fact that a kitchen catastrophe is erupting
And the dog just lost her mind,?
And the kids that are fighting over their imaginary friend.
Oops, the cat is puking the Christmas ornaments.
I wish you were here. I know you are here; I just miss you.?
I’m going to go have some fun now. Someone decided to smoke smores in the kitchen.
We have a hot competition of Carrom that you know I’m going to win.?
I miss you, but I’m going to go have some fun now. I’ll tell you all about it tonight.
DVM, DACVIM (Neurology)
1 年??????
President and CEO of Primo Solutions, LLC | Motivational Speaker | Senior Housing Corporate Sales Trainer | Consultant | Author | Army Combat Veteran | BTG Ambassador
1 年This is spot on!