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Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,579
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Paging sunshine&rainbows

 

How are you as of late, and where are you my friend???

 

Long time since we have QVC cyber chatted, and I  have missed you very much.

 

Also I so hope your Brother has healed, and all is better now.....

 

In any event please reply asap, amd God Bless all of you.

 

With much sisterly love, prayers, and many comfort hugs,

adoreSmiley Happy.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,579
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Delayed grief....

[ Edited ]

I know the Holidays without our loved ones can really be very sad, and quite difficult, and that is putting it mildly.

 

I celebrate the Christian Greek Orthodox Easter this coming Sunday, and know my loved ones are all smiling down at me from above, and I am happy they are no longer suffering on Earth, but enjoying everlasting life in God's glorious sacred Heaven, and that is as it should be.

 

Nevertheless I do cry very much, and get depressed because I now am the sole survivor, of a very large family with many USA relations, all deceased now.

 

I surely do miss them so very much, but that is to be expected.

 

It matters not what year they passed, because what matters is they are not here any longer to be with and celebrate with me as a family.....and they have never met my current husband, so all of that is what really stings ....... beyond belief.

 

I hope for those grieving you will not grieve alone, and try your best to also celebrate holidays in your own way to honor those who are no longer with us, and to also honor the holiday, as that is what your dearly departed loved ones would expect.......just as mine do.

 

 

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,606
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

Re: Delayed grief....

[ Edited ]

 

           Greetings, @adoreqvc!Smiley  Always so good to see your posts.   I clicked on @sunshine&rainbows's nickname and her last post on the forums was 3/30/16, so she's been checking in -- and I'm glad to see that!Smiley   Sending good thoughts to you, @adoreqvc, and to everyone who reads and posts here.   When my dear father passed away, when I was 17, it was at Thanksgiving.   My mother, who also now is in heaven, encouraged us all to think of the holidays and other special days as a time to celebrate the life of our loved ones who aren't here with us anymore, to celebrate the joy they had in life since that's what they would want us to do.   It's really helped me a lot, since so many of my loved ones died very young and I've been without them for so many years now.   I think we honor their life and spirit with joy and gratitude, and so although not always successful I try my best to do that.    My heart goes out to all who grieve.Heart

 

          @adoreqvc, and all who celebrate, I hope your Christian Greek Orthodox Easter will be a joyous one, filled with warmth and love.Heart

 

 

Few things reveal your intellect and your generosity of spirit—the parallel powers of your heart and mind—better than how you give feedback.~Maria Popova
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,454
Registered: ‎01-13-2013

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Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,606
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

 

        That's powerful, @YorkieonmyPillow.  I've never seen it before.  Thanks for sharing it.Heart

 

        It reminds me of several things shared on Facebook a couple of days ago, for a friend who was mourning the loss of her mother.   I'll post some things later.  Thanks, again, for sharing that.

 

Few things reveal your intellect and your generosity of spirit—the parallel powers of your heart and mind—better than how you give feedback.~Maria Popova
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Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,606
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

 

 

Heart"As for grief, you'll find it comes in waves." (from @YorkieonmyPillow's post)

 

 

 

Healing

 

 

 

Few things reveal your intellect and your generosity of spirit—the parallel powers of your heart and mind—better than how you give feedback.~Maria Popova
Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,606
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

Re: Delayed grief....

[ Edited ]

 

 

"The Parable of Immortality"

"I am standing upon the seashore.
A ship at my side spreads her white sails to the morning breeze
and starts for the blue ocean.
She is an object of beauty and strength,
and I stand and watch until at last she hangs
like a speck of white cloud
just where the sea and sky come down to mingle with each other.
Then someone at my side says,
'There she goes!'
Gone where?
Gone from my sight . . . that is all.
She is just as large in mast and hull and spar
as she was when she left my side
and just as able to bear her load of living freight
to the place of destination.
Her diminished size is in me, not in her.
And just at the moment
when someone at my side says,
'There she goes!'
there are other eyes watching her coming . . .
and other voices ready to take up the glad shout . . .
'Here she comes!' "


(by the Rev. Luther F. Beecher, a New England preacher and a cousin of Harriet Beecher Stowe.)
 
 
Few things reveal your intellect and your generosity of spirit—the parallel powers of your heart and mind—better than how you give feedback.~Maria Popova
Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,606
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

Re: Delayed grief....

[ Edited ]

 

            Many of us were feeling emptiness and grief on Mother's Day, missing our moms or other women who played an important role in our life.   I just saw this article this morning, and wanted to share it.   (Sorry for the length, but some posters don't like to use links.)

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

"Two dear friends of mine lost their mothers this month, a high school friend and an old love.    I’ve been sitting here trying to write condolence cards to them, but the inadequacy of everything I’m trying to say, especially having lost my own mother 18 months ago, is leaving me stymied.

 

“I’m so sorry you’ve lost your mother,” sounds like they might have left her at the mall or in their other pants.    It doesn’t even begin to convey what I understand about losing your mother, that even if her death came peacefully after a long struggle, it still feels like a wrenching severance, an amputation.

 

We have not “lost” our mothers.    We say that to be polite, but in truth, we have become un-mothered, like Marie Antoinette was un-headed or that wilderness hiker who sawed off his arm was un-handed.    It feels violent. It feels raw and fundamental, a pain that reaches all the way down to your ligaments and bones.    Our mothers were our first firmament, literally, our first homes, the universe from whose substance we were formed.

 

And while this is a pain that all creatures who are born must face, it does not make saying goodbye to your mother any easier to do.

 

To my grieving friends I would say: “Brace yourselves.”    Grief on this scale is like a physical object that the body must expel.

 

My uncle fought in Vietnam and was close by when a fellow soldier stepped on a landmine and died instantly.    My uncle survived, but with serious injuries.    For years after, pieces of shrapnel would occasionally begin to work their way up and out through his flesh.

 

Grief is like that – it’s inside you and it has to come out.    There are no shortcuts.    Be prepared for sudden explosions of feeling that overtake you at inappropriate times.    Once, upon seeing a mother with twin toddler sons at the local grocery store, I had to abandon a nearly full cart of groceries and rush out of the store to go cry in the car in big, ugly, gulping sobs.

 

Over the course of the first year, I became quietly obsessed with Victorian mourning customs.    I checked the calendar periodically to see at what points it was appropriate to exchange black crape for bombazine, at what date the black ribbon should be taken down from the house’s front door, and how long as a male member of the family would it be appropriate to wear a black armband or hat band, a signal to the world that says: “Be kind to me. I am in pain.”

 

Nowadays, of course, we don’t do any of that.    We take a few days off of work and then we’re back in the game, ready or not.     Please, no crying in the break room, like Joan Holloway on Mad Men said. “There’s a place to do that – like in your apartment.”

 

We’re left to wander back into the world, where everything looks the same, but for us, every movement and every breath feels weighted down by this suffocating cloud of sadness.    What are we supposed to do with that?   How are we to function?

 

My high school friend, a West Point graduate who has done multiple tours of duty in Afghanistan, wrote to me: “For the first time in my life, I know sorrow. I’ve felt sadness, deep sadness, but this is another thing.”

 

“She will always be with you,” say the well-meaning, but if that’s true, I want to know why I still feel so miserably alone.    Why can’t I talk to her or smell the sweet, clean scent of her hair when I hug her one last time?

 

There’s nothing good that comes out of the death of someone you love, but I have learned this: the magnitude and bottomlessness of the pain you feel is a testament to the love you shared.    And while I don’t ever expect to arrive at a point in life where I’m alright with the fact that my mother is gone, I know that I am so, so lucky to have loved and been loved that much by anyone.

 

That may be small consolation against the howling wind of sadness that is blowing through my friends’ lives right now, but it’s the best that I can offer.    That pain you’re feeling is directly proportional to how much you loved and were loved.

 

It does not ever, apparently, go away altogether, but over time the howling diminishes to a roar, which degrades to a sigh and you find yourself able to go about your life again, though sadder, different.    Be gentle and kind to yourself and honor each stage of what you’re feeling and, as much as you can, be thankful for your mother’s love."

 

 

source:  http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/mar/03/we-dont-lose-our-mothers-reality-more-violent-t...

 

And I saw this because it was shared by a lovely website:  "Soulseeds" - http://www.soulseeds.com/about/

 

Heart

 

 

Few things reveal your intellect and your generosity of spirit—the parallel powers of your heart and mind—better than how you give feedback.~Maria Popova
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,616
Registered: ‎10-01-2014

@dooBdoo, that was an exceptional article you posted. Those of us who have walked that journey can see, and feel, the truth it contains. Thank you so much for posting it.

No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted. - Aesop
Super Contributor
Posts: 362
Registered: ‎06-06-2015

@adoreqvc wrote:

Paging sunshine&rainbows

 

How are you as of late, and where are you my friend???

 

Long time since we have QVC cyber chatted, and I  have missed you very much.

 

Also I so hope your Brother has healed, and all is better now.....

 

In any event please reply asap, amd God Bless all of you.

 

With much sisterly love, prayers, and many comfort hugs,

adoreSmiley Happy.


Paging @adoreqvc

 

I am just back from a beautiful vacation, my dear friend!

I apologize if I might have worried you my cyberfriend (which is new to me)

I have also missed our conversations, I did spend time with my little brother and I can still see his smiling face, and all the others...

I am so grateful for life and appreciate it, I needed this vacation.

We made memories my, Adore & Phillip!HeartHeart

God's Blessing to you and yours.

 

My beautiful sister, thank you for the love and prayers and comfort hugs.

Love Always and forever... sunshine