Spring is my favorite season. Each day brings new delightful colors in flowers. Right now as I look out my window, I see varieties of pink. The dark rose of a rhododendron with a deep scarlet in the throat of the flower. Right next to it is a smaller azalea. It is a baby pink and the blossoms look like tiny roses folding open.
The birdsong feeds my soul.
Twice in spring, I was a griever. Those mornings when I woke up from a sleepless night, my eyes feasted on the beauty around me. I didn’t want to be in the grief state, but there I was. I’m reminded of that period of time by a photograph taken one of those springs. I was surrounded by my four siblings. They loved me, accepted me and didn’t want me to be sad, but they understood. I have a smile on my face, but my eyes are sad.
I worked through that spring season. The summer. The fall. And then the winter again. My grief didn’t pass as quickly as I would have liked, but gradually, day by day, it began to soften and lessen.
Why do I speak of such a very sad time? Because one of you might be there. You might be in the shock of loss and you don’t think you will ever be interested in flowers and springtime and the songs of the birds. You will. I promise you. There’s work to be done, though. Don’t just wait for time to pass, hoping your grief will lessen. It takes grief work.
What is grief work? There are many things you can do, but let me suggest one thing. Write a letter to the loved one you are grieving. I can’t write, you might say. It really doesn’t matter, for this is for you and no one else. In your letter, tell them something you wish you’d said to them. Ask them a question and though they won’t answer you, you can still ask. Your letter might be a goodbye letter. That won’t be easy, but I recommend you do it.
After you’ve written the letter, seal it. Put it where you can find it and in six months or a year, get it out again. When I opened my letter, I was at my husband’s graveside and I read it out loud there. By myself. It was healing. I cried more tears, but tears can heal and I could also see I had moved forward in my grief. I still hurt. I still missed my loved one. But word by word. Season by season. I could see I was healing.
Are you brave enough to be openly honest and write your words down? It does take bravery, but you can do it.
I was encouraged then and sometimes now, by a verse in the Psalms.
Weeping may tarry for the night
but joy comes with the morning.Β (Psalm 30:5 b RSV).
I promise you. It will.
I have found journaling my thoughts to be very healing throughout my life. I have gone in spurts, but as you say it is just for me, and even if I am not working through a grief at the time, journaling has given me a place to organize my thoughts. After my mom passed away in 2014, there entered a crazy time in my life when even though I thought I was only rejoicing for her that she was present with the Lord, my body broke out in hives all over, and I experienced such pain that I had to walk with a walker to get around. The medications that the doctors resorted to for this “idiopathic urticaria” made me spend many sleepless nights in the recliner in the living room, and that is one time when I found great solace in working through a very frustrating time for me. During that time, I was able to write down how helpless I was and it was a time when God had me realize how dependent I am upon Him for every aspect of my life. I now praise Him for this difficult time, and I am so glad that I wrote down my frustrations, because it is easy to forget the hard times once you have worked through them.
I also love writing down my thoughts during the really great times! We also tend to forget the great times, unless we write them down!
I praise God that you have taken on the work of this blog. Your writings have helped so many people, and meet the need, whether sad or happy. Thank you for doing this, Shirley!
Well said, Ruthie! I appreciate your reading my blog! Blessings to you and Steve!
Beautiful PostπππΉπ·β¨ππ€
Kathleen
Thank you! Hugs SIL!