9 Helpful Things To Know About Grief that Nobody Warns You About | KQED (2024)

Commentary

Rae Alexandra

Save Article

Save Article

Failed to save article

Please try again

9 Helpful Things To Know About Grief that Nobody Warns You About | KQED (1)

(Guillaume de Germain/ Unsplash)

To save us all some time, I’m going to start this by being blunt. A lot of my friends are dead. Romantic partners, roommates, high school friends, college friends, music scene friends, co-workers—too many to mention by name here. I can tell you that the youngest was 15 and the oldest was 47. And that there have been cancers, vehicular collisions, strokes, suicides, freak accidents, substance abuse, mental health problems, and one random act of violence.

It doesn’t get easier, but you do get less surprised the more that it happens.

I get the sense that more people understand that now than maybe did a year ago. Because in that time, of course, well over half a million American lives were lost to COVID-19. That’s too many to even comprehend, but calculations say a third of the country’s population lost someone. And I believe it. Because in the last 12 months—for the first time in my entire life—it has felt like the whole world stepped through the curtain and joined me in the waiting room.

Mourning one death while cautiously anticipating the next is not, as my mother has been fond of reminding me for years, “normal.” But we’re all in here now. In one way or another.

The thing with grief is that it does things to you that no one ever warns you about. Yes, grief is random and different each time, depending on who you are and who you’ve lost. But there are also a few things I wish I’d known earlier—the stuff that nobody wants to tell you because it probably sounds too harsh. But I do believe that knowing these things helps you move through grief better prepared, and stronger for it. And, as we ease out of this pandemic and start the business of all of this painful processing, we need all the help we can get. So I wanted to share some things I have learned the hard way (i.e. by doing it wrong).

Sponsored

[Please note that the following is based purely on personal experience and may not be applicable to everyone. I am not a mental health professional; I’m just a journalist who’s done this a lot.]

1. Ignore the Concept of Finite Stages of Grief

One of the biggest mistakes I ever made, grief-wise, was to assume that the five stages (or seven—depends who you ask) would just happen over time, in due process, and then I’d go back to normal. That is not what happens. Grief is not orderly. Worse, the idea of finite stages implies an end point to grieving. Trust me when I say you won’t necessarily get to an end point. Sometimes grief stays with you forever. It is far better to prepare for that eventuality than to assume it will all cease to hurt once you’ve ticked your way down the list.

2. Be Prepared For Loopy Thoughts

Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking was the first account of grief I ever read in which the writer unabashedly acknowledged the bizarre trips your brain takes you on after someone you love dies. And I cannot describe the relief of knowing I was not on my own. To give you a good example from the book, two months after her husband’s sudden death, Didion details packing up his clothing to give away. She has been encouraged to do this by various loved ones so is trying her best to get on with it.

Didion writes:

I was not yet prepared to address the suits and shirts and jackets but I thought I could handle what remained of the shoes, a start.

I stopped at the door to the room.

I could not give away the rest of his shoes.

I stood there for a moment, then realized why: he would need shoes if he was to return.

The recognition of this thought by no means eradicated the thought.

This is actually normal.

3. Time Doesn’t Heal All Wounds

I’m really sorry about this one. I am. But I strongly suspect that “time heals all wounds” is a lie someone made up to stop someone else from crying. Hoping time alone is going to heal your grief is like assuming a severed finger is going to grow back just because you want it to.

Back in 2013, my husband died suddenly. It is, far and away, the single worst thing that has ever happened to me. But because I was under the impression that time was an almighty healer back then, I thought all I had to do was white knuckle it for long enough and the agony would dissipate. It didn’t. And when it still hadn’t gone away three years later, in my confused, exhausted state, I convinced myself that my “grief energy” had worked its way into my home and was preventing me from healing.(See: No. 2.) I responded to this suspicion by cutting off all my hair, giving away all my furniture, and moving to Texas.

I recognize now that I was having a very organized, very quiet, very geographically ambitious breakdown. But that’s what relying too heavily on time fixing stuff gets you.

4. You Can’t Go Back

It took me an embarrassingly long time to figure this out, but getting over a death is not about getting back to who you were and how you felt before the loss. That, unfortunately, is impossible. Death leaves slashes across your life, dividing it into ‘before’ and ‘after’ segments. As such, you have to learn how to treasure the before without hanging onto it too tightly—doing so will stop you from moving forward into the after. It takes a while to get to grips with this one, but knowing you eventually have to might help you get there quicker.

5. Everything Doesn’t Happen For a Reason

When you are in mourning, a lot of people will tell you everything happens for a reason. These people are well-meaning, but absolutely infuriating. Sometimes terrible things just happen and are impossible to make sense of. Please don’t waste your energy on trying to find meaning where there is none. Focus instead on the healing you’ve got to do—it’s time much better spent.

6. Your Body Might Feel Permanently Different

Deep grief for a lot of people feels a lot like being hollowed out and weighed down simultaneously. At the start, that extra weight you feel is unwieldy and exhausting and it can drag you down to the point of depressed immobility. You think you’ll never be able to carry it on your own. And there’s a good chance that your friends and family are going to need to help you shoulder that burden. After a while though, you do figure out how to carry the weight on your own. And after a long time, you’ll have entire days and weeks where you don’t even notice it. After an accident or an operation, there is a period of figuring out how to function in your new body. Sometimes grief necessitates a form of physical recovery as well.

7. Don’t Forget to Cry When You Want To

It sounds so basic, I know. But culturally, we are not in a place where we can all just burst into tears whenever we feel like it—even in a pandemic. And holding it in is legit bad for you.

In the first half of 2020, I lost two friends in three days, and then my dog died. In the second half of 2020, I was suddenly afflicted with severe and chronic back pain that massage, physiotherapy and acupressure all failed to fix. The thing that rid me of it in the end? Energy work that was performed by a concerned friend over the phone. (I didn’t even know such a thing existed.) The many distractions and stresses of 2020 meant I had not been crying enough. My body needed me to stop and let it happen, and it physically hurt me until I finally did.

8. Using Alcohol and/or Weed is Fine

If you’re grieving, unless sobriety is something you’ve been actively working towards or living with, do not beat yourself up for wanting to take the edge off. A lot of professionals don’t feel okay admitting this out loud, but which is better: staying up for three days with raging grief-insomnia or drinking a glass of whiskey and/or smoking some indica, so you can actually get some rest? Using alcohol or any other substance as a daily crutch is not going to go well in the long term. But grabbing a break from the pain every now and again is perfectly fine—unless you are an addict or risk harming others by imbibing.

9. You Already Know You Need Therapy, Right?

Sponsored

Of course you do. Every grief column on the internet says so. But it bears repeating, even on a list of things that people don’t usually tell you. I have mourned with and without a therapist—and with is definitely better. Last summer, KQED’s Nastia Voynovskaya, compiled a list of affordable, sliding scale and culturally competent therapy options in the Bay Area. If you can access any of these resources, you will more than likely benefit. And if you are unable to, please seek advice elsewhere. I recommend utilizing grief podcasts, Facebook grief pages and local help groups. Because knowing you’re not on your own is half the battle. And after the last 12 months? Well, you are definitely not alone.

Care about what’s happening in Bay Area arts? Stay informed with one email every other week—right to your inbox.

Thanks for signing up for the newsletter.

9 Helpful Things To Know About Grief that Nobody Warns You About | KQED (2024)

FAQs

9 Helpful Things To Know About Grief that Nobody Warns You About | KQED? ›

Someone else was living my life, bright-eyed and ready for the next day; no one tells you how much you just want to lie in bed and forget about the world. No one tells you how grief forces you to look at yourself. How agonizing taking care of yourself is when you get your worth from helping others.

What nobody tells you about grief? ›

Someone else was living my life, bright-eyed and ready for the next day; no one tells you how much you just want to lie in bed and forget about the world. No one tells you how grief forces you to look at yourself. How agonizing taking care of yourself is when you get your worth from helping others.

What are the 3 C's of grief? ›

As you build a plan, consider the “three Cs”: choose, connect, communicate. Choose: Choose what's best for you. Even during dark bouts of grief, you still possess the dignity of choice. “Grief often brings the sense of loss of control,” says Julie.

What does grief do to your body? ›

Grief can cause a variety of effects on the body including increased inflammation,8 joint pain, headaches, and digestive problems. It can also lower your immunity, making you more susceptible to illness. Grief also can contribute to cardiovascular problems, difficulty sleeping, and unhealthy coping mechanisms.

What are some important facts about grief? ›

Grief is a normal, natural and painful emotional reaction to loss. Grieving involves intense feelings – love, sadness, fear, anger, relief, compassion, hate, or happiness, to name a few. These feelings are intense, upsetting and can be long-lasting. Grieving has been described as drowning in a sea of painful emotions.

What is the hardest thing about grief? ›

Losing someone you love is the hardest thing in the world to deal with. Itʼs a kind of pain that you physically feel all over your body. Itʼs suffering of the worst kind. To make things even worse, it seems like no one else understands how youʼre feeling.

Does nobody have the right to tell you how do you grieve? ›

I believe strongly that no one can tell another person “how” to grieve. There's no set formula, action plan or knowledge found in any set resource better than experiencing it for ourselves. Just as each of us has a unique set of fingerprints, we also have unique reactions to death.

What are the 5 pillars of grief? ›

The five stages, denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance are a part of the framework that makes up our learning to live with the one we lost.

What are the 6 R's of grief? ›

significant loss. She called her model the "Six R's":

React: Recollect & Re-experience: Relinquish: Re-adjust: Reinvest: the loss: First, people must experience their loss and understand that it has happened.

What are the 4 stages of grief tear? ›

Wordens Tasks of Mourning
  • Task I: To accept the reality of the loss.
  • Task II: To process the pain of grief.
  • Task III: To adjust to a world without the deceased.
  • Task IV: To find an enduring connection with the deceased in the midst of embarking on a new life.

What organ does grief weaken? ›

Intense grief can alter the heart muscle so much that it causes "broken heart syndrome," a form of heart disease with the same symptoms as a heart attack. Stress links the emotional and physical aspects of grief.

What makes grieving worse? ›

Birthdays, wedding dates, holidays and other special occasions create a heightened sense of loss. At these times, you may likely experience a grief attack or memory embrace. Your “pangs” of grief may also occur in response to circ*mstances that remind you of the painful absence of someone in your life.

Does grief age your face? ›

Grief or bereavement releases the hormone cortisol in reaction to stress that breaks down tissue and, in excess, can lead to collagen breakdown and accelerated aging. High cortisol levels prompt the skin's sebaceous glands to release more sebum. This in turn results in clogged pores, inflammation, and an increase in p.

What is a shocking fact about grief? ›

A lot of people know the basic stages of grief — denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. But one of the most surprising facts about grief is that you're not necessarily going to check each stage off, one after another. Instead, Wright says, we often “hop, skip and jump” through grief's stages.

What is the greatest grief of life? ›

According to Kisa Gotami, the greatest grief of life is the death of loved ones and one's inability to stop them from dying.

How do most people grieve? ›

People feel grief in different ways – not everyone will cry or feel sad. Some people might feel shocked or numb, especially in the first days or weeks. Sometimes people feel relief that the person has died.

Why people don t talk about grief? ›

Discussing grief can be uncomfortable for several reasons. Firstly, grief is a deeply personal and emotional experience, and some individuals may find it challenging to express their feelings or fear being judged for their reactions.

Why we don t talk about grief? ›

It makes us uncomfortable. We don't know what to say and worry if we do say something that it'll be wrong or inappropriate. So we tend to say very little. A really remarkable woman who lost her husband in a car crash a few years ago told me something that continues to stick in my mind.

Why do people not understand grief? ›

In fact, most people in our culture do not know how to act or what to say when someone dies, so they err on the side of caution and don't do or say anything. This avoidance can be very painful. But it's human nature. We tend to shy away from raw displays of grief because they make us feel uncomfortable.

Why do people hide grief? ›

People may avoid grief because they are members of a family or a society in which grief is frowned on; they may avoid it because they fear the consequences if they should express it; or they may simply believe that they have more important things to do.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg Kuvalis

Last Updated:

Views: 6466

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg Kuvalis

Birthday: 1996-12-20

Address: 53157 Trantow Inlet, Townemouth, FL 92564-0267

Phone: +68218650356656

Job: IT Representative

Hobby: Knitting, Amateur radio, Skiing, Running, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Electronics

Introduction: My name is Greg Kuvalis, I am a witty, spotless, beautiful, charming, delightful, thankful, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.