12 Responses

  1. Monica Friesen
    Monica Friesen at |

    Great discussion – As you know this is a topic of great awareness for me as nurse, one who has come alongside those both in birthing and at many ages along life’s journey where grief is very poignant. I am no literary guru, but Shakespeare’s words resonate with me; “Give sorrow words: the grief that does not speak whispers the oe’r fraught heart and bits it break.” To keep the experience locked up in a broken heart brings deeper wounds. Grief is an emotion that needs a form of expression – a story, a song, a poem, a painting, etc.
    Attached is a link to a documentary I was part of several years ago entitled “Nurses Grieve Too”
    https://vimeo.com/18714302

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  2. Coral Thew
    Coral Thew at |

    Thanks for this
    Colleen,
    A theatre colleague of mine died last week in a tragic accident. I hadn’t seen him in years but I think about his death day and night and cry for his loss daily…my response has surprised me but at the same time it feels incredibly positive to let my feelings and my tears flow through me. Facing death puts life into perspective for me and helps me discover what is worth fighting for and what to let go.

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  3. Elinor
    Elinor at |

    I have clear memories from my childhood of tearing open the buns at a post-funeral ‘faspa’ and putting sugar cubes inside to make a sugar sandwich. I can remember many things in that scene. The church basement, long tables with lots of big people, the white sugar cubes (a ‘treat’ we didn’t have at home), the yellowness of the fresh Grunthal cheese, how small I was compared to the table. I’m pretty sure it was at my Mother’s funeral. I was 7.
    It’s not surprising that death and funerals shape us when we had extended families in small tight-knit communities and every few years there was a death in our big extended family.

    Menno friends are priceless. Special. Comfort friends. 🙂

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  4. Catherine
    Catherine at |

    My mother died 15 years ago and my dad 5 years ago. For both the funerals of my parents I wore black – as a mark of respect and sadness for the departure of dearly loved parents. The family wore black – it was not imposed but felt that it was the right choice of colour. I have never felt that in our society I am not allowed to grieve – some people grieve longer than others (in my case it’s more on the longer side).
    It might be the “new thing” not to grieve and to treat funerals as a “jolly affair” – not in my religion though – the Roman Catholic Faith. We are entitled to grieve and enter a church to pray silently.
    Grieving is important – I read once a true story of a woman who had lost her son and everybody commented “how well she coped” but 3 years later she developed a stutter – probably as a direct consequence as “coping so well”.

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  5. Liz Jansen
    Liz Jansen at |

    The hyacinth on its side – it’s a Menno thing. At least it brought back memories of my grandmother and a group photograph taken in Russia. They were positioned around a table holding a vase of flowers—turned on its side so as not to obscure the faces I’m guessing. But definitely intentionally placed on its side. When we asked her about it, it was as if it was a completely normal thing to do, but she laughed when she thought about it. Thank you for the memories.

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  6. Laurie
    Laurie at |

    What is really interesting to me is that on the feedburner copy of this post I received in my email inbox the hyacinth is shown horizontally instead of vertically as it appears here on your site. I found the incongruent juxtaposition strangely comforting with the word ‘hope’ in the caption below it. I will send you a copy by email (and as your Geek, I must now find out WHY that happened) but maybe it is a mystery and a message all together.

    I love feeling things, whatever they are, and grief is one emotion I have found must be savoured to be digested so as not to kill me. Today I’m grieving a friend with an Alzheimer’s like illness and I keep getting sideswiped by it and thinking, ‘but she is still here, locked inside her mind’… so strange to grieve someone gone and learn to know and love the new person or the character of the remnants still with us while she travels to far flung planets in her mind. It’s not like she’s one of my dearest either, but the yearning to go back in time is so intense it takes my breath away at times.

    I wrote a poem once about us ‘augering ourselves into this good, decent earth;’ and that’s what I think grief also is, a kind of growing in the dying.

    XO

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