I was watching a promotional ad on television recently for the show "Intervention" and saw a quote from Ernest Hemingway, which read: "The world breaks everyone, and afterward many are strong at the broken places." Hemingway was one of the great American writers of his time, who died in 1961 as a result of suicide. As an aside, Neil Peart of Rush wrote the lyrics to a hauntingly beautiful song called "Losing It" which in part alluded to the rise and fall of Ernest Hemingway.
The first part of this quote: "The world breaks everyone", may seem on the surface to be both morbid and fatalistic. The reality is that if we live long enough, we will become broken by events in the world that are tragic and painful beyond belief. I believe that loss breaks everyone to one degree or another. When my daughter Jeannine died in 2003, at the age of 18, many parts of me were broken. My faith, my trust in a greater good, my values, my hopes for the future, were all shattered beyond recognition. During my early grief, I never fathomed that the broken parts of me could ever be fixed. I could not visualize experiencing joy again.
I am in the ninth year of my journey as a parent who has experienced the death of a child and I have been able to find joy and meaning again. In essence, I became stronger at the places that were broken after Jeannine's death. I did it by reading about other parents who became stronger at their broken places after their children died, and finding out how they did it. I also availed myself of the support of other parents who understood my pain and together we discovered how to fix the broken places.
Fixing the broken places of our grief does not mean that our world returns to the way it was before our children died, or that the pain of our loss ever truly goes away. What I believe we learn to do is fix the broken places of our grief in a way that allows us to find significance in a world that is different without our children. Understanding that our relationships with our children continue after they cross over, and that they communicate signs of their presence has helped fix the broken places of my grief.
There is no time frame for fixing the broken places of our grief. It will take as long as it takes. As long as you are willing to work through your pain of loss, you will eventually learn new ways of dealing with it. Please remember, that hope for the promise of a redefined world after the death of our children, can come from the most unlikely of sources. Just be open to it happening and embrace it when it does.
I have much respect for those who have, with no choice, painfully arrived at "broken places" and have pulled unimaginable strength from somewhere within, to carry on, weighted with uncertainty. This is why I KNOW they are better human beings. Now much wiser and not afraid to absorb the brutal truths that life often tells while able to educate others of the meaning.
ReplyDelete(Sadder still) for many, it leaves them anchored at bay and battered with fear from storms and broken places they wish not to experience again, leaving the greatest manifest undelivered.
Thank you for so beautifully and honestly stating your perspective on my blog entry.
ReplyDeleteI wish you a peace filled holiday season.
Hi Dave
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your journey and knowing that there is hope for the future and a life after a child has died.
I agree with the comment by Anonymous that not everyone manages to find a way out of the broken places. Perhaps in part this is because in the early years there seems to be no hope, the path feels to long and tortuous to contemplate fully embarking on. From my own experience, I know that the road out of such deep grief and loss is not easy and that we have to dig deep within to keep our light lit.
Trusting and knowing that there is a way out and that we will shine brightly again is the gift that we have to share with others on the path.
With blessings for the work that you are doing
Ruby
Ruby. Thank you for your insightful comments and likewise blessings for the wonderful work that you are doing to help parents and siblings who have experienced the death of their child, brother or sister.
ReplyDelete