Legal Law

What every bereaved should know

Do you wonder if the pain will ever end every time you think of your deceased loved one? Is there anything you can do to lessen the horror of the nightmare you’re living through? Are you thinking about what the future will be like without him or her? These questions are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to coping with the death of a loved one.

Many more questions need to be addressed and you, in the final analysis, must make decisions based on what you believe to be true and the information you have at hand. The latter is often a major problem, since much of the education about loss and change is based on pure conjecture and the example of poor adult complaint models.

Here are six pieces of information that can reduce some of your pain and suffering as you make the inevitable decisions imposed by loss.

1. All those feelings that haunt you are conditions of existence, part of the price we pay for loving. Although you may feel like you are “going crazy,” despair, devastation, shame, guilt, failure, depression, confusion, or a host of other feelings are common and, in many cases, expected. Don’t berate yourself or feel ashamed for the way you feel or act. This is the grievance process going on pure and simple, a world everyone deals with at some point.

2. We need each other. You don’t have to “be strong” as many of us were taught. Let others hear what is happening inside of you. Be specific. Allow friends and neighbors to share your complaint and do some of the chores you would normally do. Save your energy for your complaint work; it takes a lot. And don’t forget, it’s not uncommon for some friends you thought would be very helpful to you to be embarrassed. Don’t stop at it; that is not worth it.

3. You have to do it or it won’t get done. You and only you must make the decisions, the movements and the intentions to accept this dark night of the soul, to let it unfold and to learn from it. Recognize that you can’t fix it right away; That is the terrible reality that must be faced. Give in to the process and know that you have to face the pain, don’t try to run from it. However, it is necessary to take a break and divert attention. But refuse to avoid it indefinitely, because it will manifest itself in ways that delay healthy adjustment.

4. Love is the way out. Now wait a minute what are you thinking; What does love have to do with it? It is the reason you are grieving in the first place. And paradoxically, your commitment to be even more loving is guaranteed to lessen your pain and strengthen the way you feel about yourself.

Never back down in love; doing so will ultimately add to your complaint work. When you give love, you get it back. Revitalize life, feed our visions, even if the grievance stays with us. Yes, you can love and suffer in the same framework. Love makes you come out of yourself and is a hidden healer.

5. Feed your spiritual life. What do we understand by spirit? That part of the deep inner self that deals with meaning and mystery in life and death, as well as a relationship with something greater than the self. By nurturing your spiritual life (in your individual way), you may well find meaning in the death of your loved one, which is a search we all have to do. Turning to your spiritual side will help you in the changes you will face as a person and as part of your family.

And don’t minimize the power of gratitude, appreciation, and kindness to play an important role in coping with your great loss, if you explore and practice them. Just try staying in a state of gratitude for a few minutes and see what it does for you; all of this is as much a part of your spirituality as watching a sunrise, holding a newborn, taking a mini-vacation in your imagination, or spending a night gazing at the stars.

6. Don’t dismiss these three words lightly: persistence, patience, and commitment; they make a difference and will reduce your pain and suffering. I have already said before that you are in charge of your grievance and steer the ship. What is needed for a successful trip? First, believe that you need to change and move on: you are not the same person. This is easy to say, but hard to do.

Second, when you have setbacks, which are quite common, you have to get up and try again and again. And lastly, be patient. Keep telling yourself, it will get better. I will get over this. It takes a lot longer than we’re led to believe to handle our losses because we’ve been conditioned into an instantaneous environment of everything. If you persist, the pain will subside.

In short, the death of your loved one will mean that you will have to let go of old roles and take on new ones, as well as leaving your old world and embracing a new one. You will acquire a new identity. This is all part of your complaint job. It’s arduous, sometimes daunting, and it’s essential to give yourself permission to feel the emotions that come through it all.

assert yourself Do what is right for you in this moment of transformation. Replenish. You possess the inherent ability to cope with your great loss.

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