Grief - Short note

 
"There is many a word that causes a tear in the eye .. but the saddest of them all is the simplest word 'goodbye'".

 
Lately I feel I am getting lots of bad news ... first from a friend involved in an accident that wiped half his family away.

 
Next from an acquaintance who lost her hubby ... 1 month after their wedding ... just after they came back from their honeymoon. Another teen lost his dad .... and ....... I don't think I need to add more.

 
In all these instances .. there seems to be a common thread. Insensitivity of the people who come to offer condolences.

 
  • One person asks details about the accident
  • Another person asks - How do you feel about your dad ? Do you miss him ? [ Er .. what kind of question is this ? Really ??? ]
  • The girl is being consoled with ... "It is ok .. you are young .. you can always marry again " !
  • I was told - "It is ok .. you have another sister "

 I do understand that to a large extent many people feel awkward and helpless knowing that no words can assuage the pain and one can really do nothing .... so I sincerely believe my friend was trying to tell me .. I still had another sibling to hold on to .... and did not mean to sound as if one sister was the same as another .... like interchangeable objects ....

 
But on the whole .. while people have different ways of handling grief .. I would think some things are common when one approaches them -

 
  • If you don't know what to say .. it is better to just say .. you don't know what to say ...

  • Not many people like to rehash the loss ..... get the clues from the demeanor of the person ... and keep quiet when you get this edict

  • Last and definitely not the least ... every person is unique so the anguish the departure of that person brings is also unique .... the age, the situation in life .... does not matter ... only how much that person was loved.
So whether it is a still-born child, a 5 month old baby, a 6 yr old boy, a teen girl, a father , a grandmother etc ... the age has nothing to do with acute sense of distress ... and nor can one person be replaced with another !!!!

 
At most for a person who is old you might be able to face the bereavement with a degree of equanimity because you believe they have lived a long and [ hopefully ] happy life. But that may not really dull the pain ...

 
So when one visits a person in sorrow it is time to take a step back and make a conscious decision to try and be more perceptive.

Like my friend told me during my difficult time ..... "Letting go has never been easy but holding on can be just as difficult. Yet strength is (sometimes) measured not by holding on but by letting go."

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Our shastras laid out rules for every aspect of life and that includes how we conduct ourselves during times like this. When to visit the bereaved, gestures/words to avoid and those to use, to eat/drink or not to etc...These "codes" took into account the timing, empathy, mutual help etc...

But somewhere in-between, we chose to ignore those rules perhaps because (a) the rules were handed down the generations without meaning and context (hence perceived as rigid procedures) (b) we were becoming more - as it seems - modern and western

None of this is excuse to being callous or rude - I think the problem starts with people being judgmental.

Not sure there is a solution, other than people realizing it.

Similar example is when A meets B, when B has just been diagnosed of - say - cancer. And A blissfully goes "I know this friend of friend of mine, who suffered from cancer" and goes on to say "she died recently". Cant think of a parallel to this kind of insensitivity.

Vidya said...

Yes Rao .... I would think we forgot the reasoning behind the rules which is why it was easy to forego them...

The example you gave makes me shudder .. thank fully have never heard it and hopefully .. never will ... !!!!

Namratha said...

Well written...n I agree with u completely... sad state of affairs really...

Vidya said...

Thanks Namratha .. :)

The Observer's Conclusion said...

Where did you find the wonderful graphic "sorrow.jpg"? Is it a painting?

Vidya said...

Forgot the site where I got ... but it was a site that I found through gen search for free pics ...

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