navigating loss and death - Kim Ann Clay psychotherapy

Navigating Loss And Death

This week marks the three-year anniversary of my Mom’s passing, and next month marks the second anniversary of my Dad’s passing. I miss my parents deeply and think of them daily. Over the past few years I have spent time spiraling in and out of grief. I have also experienced quiet moments filled with love, gratitude, and a knowing that my parents (along with all my loved ones) are forever close in my heart.

 

THE IMPORTANCE OF OTHER PEOPLE IN OUR HEALING PROCESS

Navigating grief can feel overwhelming for many people, especially given how isolated some people can become in their grieving process. This past year has made it even more challenging, as we’ve become more isolated and have had to shift the way we’ve learned to cope. Even if you are physically alone, you do not have to be emotionally isolated. 

I’ve learned through my own walk with grief how important the presence of other people are in healing and coming to a place of peace and acceptance around death and loss. We cannot grieve alone. When we are surrounded by others, it reminds us of life in the present moment, it keeps us grounded, and allows us to accept death and grief as intrinsic to being human.

 

VALUING OUR PRECIOUS HUMAN LIFE

This past year and the loss of so many lives due to Covid, as well as other causes of death, has made the notion of impermanence a reality for far too many people throughout the world who are grieving the loss of family, friends and loved ones.

Buddhist Dharma teaches us that death is certain; it is the timing of our death that is uncertain.

In Buddhism we learn about impermanence and how to meditate on death each day. In keeping death close in our awareness we learn how to value our precious human life and consider how we want to live our life. We can ask ourselves the important questions: “What do I really want today?” and “Who do I want to be today?” These questions can help us to live more in the present moment with greater awareness, kindness, and perhaps with more compassion for ourselves and others. 

 

YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE ALONE IN YOUR GRIEF

When we’re grieving, sometimes we want to curl up and shut out the world. But other times, the presence and guidance of another person can help us not only accept death as a part of life, but feel better. I am here for you. I can help you navigate your loss, come to a place of acceptance, and find moments of joy. You will learn how to hold onto your loved ones who have passed not with discomfort, but with love and peace. If you need support during this healing process, reach out to me online or email me at [email protected]

 


I came across David Whyte’s beautiful poem Farewell Letter last week. It feels timely as I come upon the anniversary of my parents’ passing. Whyte’s poem takes us into the heart of the dying mother, allowing us to feel her deep love for her son and to sense a kind of peace and acceptance around the ending of her life. 

 

Farewell Letter:

She wrote me a letter

after her death

and I remember

a kind of happy light

falling on the envelope

as I sat by the rose tree

on her old bench

at the back door,

so surprised by its arrival

wondering what she would say,

looking up before I could open it

and laughing to myself

in silent expectation.

Dear son,

it is time

for me

to leave you.

I am afraid

that the words

you are used

to hearing

are no longer mine

to give,

they are gone

and mingled

back in the world

where it is no longer

in my power

to be their first

original author

nor their last loving bearer.

You can hear

motherly

words of affection now

only from your own mouth

and only

when you speak them

to those

who stand

motherless

before you.

As for me I must forsake

adulthood

and be bound gladly

to a new childhood.

You must understand

this apprenticeship

demands of me

an elemental innocence

from everything

I ever held in my hands.

I know your generous soul

is well able to let me go

you will in the end

be happy to know

my God was true

and I find myself

after loving you all so long,

in the wide,

infinite mercy

of being mothered myself.

P.S. All your intuitions were true.

FAREWELL LETTER

in Everything is Waiting For You

Many Rivers Press ©

David Whyte

 

https://davidwhyte.com/…/everything-is-waiting-for-you

Carrying on this little theme and the red, indissoluble thread that connects mothers and grief:

A mother remains a mother even after they have passed away, and in many ways the conversation between mother and son, mother and daughter, if we allow it, can deepen, intensify and lead to new forms of love, long after their going. My mother had lost her own mother at just thirteen years old, and I had the strongest intuition just after she had passed, that she was returning to a childhood that had ended far too soon in the Ireland of her youth. To acknowledge a mother, but also to let her go into her own personhood, independent of the continually astonishing fact that she brought us into this world, may be one of the more difficult steps in the deepening maturity of that indissoluble bond. DW

 

Posted by Kim Ann Clay