Posts by Grief Stories
Caleigh – Play Session
Caleigh – Play Session
Caileigh discusses child play sessions, how children can learn about confusing feelings of grief and ways to cope.
Alongside
By Mike Bonikowsky
Grief is the great leveller, and the great divider. Everyone grieves, sooner or later, but no two people will experience it in the same way. No two bereavements are the same, and neither are any two consolations.
This is only more poignantly the case for people with developmental disabilities. Not only is their grief completely unique, but they are often unable to express it in traditional ways. How are we to support someone through the grieving process when they cannot, or will not, tell us what they are thinking and feeling about their loss? The answer is simple, and difficult.
In Christian theology, there is a concept called “the Holy Spirit”. This is the invisible piece of God that is everywhere all the time, with and within all people. The name given to this in the original ancient Greek is the “Paraclete”, literally, “The one who comes alongside.”
That is also our best, and only role, when supporting a person with a developmental disability to grieve. We must be the one that comes alongside. There is no closer place we can get to. We must be present, be with, perhaps not understanding or comprehending what the person we support is experiencing, but alongside them nonetheless. We must be there, ready to provide whatever we can discover of their unique need in grief.
But that coming alongside must begin before the bereavement. We must already have been there through the happier seasons of the person’s life, if we are to know them well enough to read the language of their grieving, and hope to know in what little ways we may support them. Supporting a person with a developmental disability to grieve is not a matter of coming alongside, but of remaining where we already were. It is a matter of knowing and being known by them, of being trusted. It is not so much a matter of doing anything for the person, but of being something for them: A safe place, a consistent and reliable presence. It is to be a fixed point in a confusing, chaotic world, someone of whom they can say: “When that person is here, I can expect things to be like this.” Only when this relationship is present and well-established in the ordinary times can we come alongside in the darkest, loneliest season on the person’s life, and hope to meet their unspoken needs.
And usually the answer to those needs is what it has always been: To simply be there with them, to prepare a meal for them and do the dishes afterward, to help them wash body and find clean clothes to wear. To open the curtains in the morning, so that when they emerge from the dark cave of their unique grief, for however short a time, they are greeted by a world that has not ended, and a face that they know, and that knows them.
Scott – Music and grief
Scott – Music and grief
Scott discusses the relationship between music and grief
Scott – Music that can transport you somewhere else
Scott – Music that can transport you somewhere else
Scott explains his thoughts about the emotional connection of music and how it can transport you
Scott – The importance of processing
Scott – The importance of processing
Scott discusses having a nervous breakdown and realizing that he hadn’t fully processed the grief he had been through with the loss of his mother and father. He also discusses how music helped him moving forward
Scott – Writing music
Scott – Writing music
Scott talks about the cathartic nature of writing music stories
Scott – Lyrics
Scott – Lyrics
Scott – Talks about how a friend in grief helped with the lyrics of “So far away”. Find the song at his website www.dotbmusic.ca
Scott – Process and lyrics
Scott – Process and lyrics
Scott talks about his process with lyrics and how his song “So far away” was for his mother in law. Find the song at his website www.dotbmusic.ca
Scott – The grieving process
Scott – The grieving process
Scott talks about how his song ‘The Good Man James” was about his father, their relationship and how it helped him process their relationship. Find the song at his website www.dotbmusic.ca
Hope – My Story
Hope – My Story
Hope tells the story of her father’s death and how it affected her and her family
Hope – Not wanting to burden my Mom and school
Hope – Not wanting to burden my Mom and school
Hope talks about her fathers death, burdens and the importance of sharing emotions
Hope – Not wanting to burden my Mom and siblings
Hope – Not wanting to burden my Mom and siblings
Hope shares how much her Mom had to do after her father died and how they worked out their relationship