Healing a Grandparent's Grieving Heart: 100 Practical Ideas After Your Grandchild Dies

Healing a Grandparent's Grieving Heart: 100 Practical Ideas After Your Grandchild Dies

by Alan D Wolfelt
Healing a Grandparent's Grieving Heart: 100 Practical Ideas After Your Grandchild Dies

Healing a Grandparent's Grieving Heart: 100 Practical Ideas After Your Grandchild Dies

by Alan D Wolfelt

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Overview

This heartfelt manual is an indispensable and easily referenced resource for grieving grandparents, offering them a way forward after the death of a grandchild. Whether they were close to their grandchild and keenly feeling his or her absence, or even if they were not close to the child and are mourning the loss of a relationship they'll never have, this book offers grandparents compassionate comfort and practical ideas for their journey through grief, addressing as well the unique pain of watching their children mourn the loss of their child. The ideas offered in the book clarify the basic principles of grief and mourning and offer immediate suggestions for things grandparents can do to embrace their grief, honor and remember their grandchild, and begin to heal.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781617221996
Publisher: Companion Press
Publication date: 05/01/2014
Series: The 100 Ideas Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Alan D. Wolfelt, PhD, is a speaker, a grief counselor, and the director of the Center for Loss and Life Transition. He is the author of Healing a Parent's Grieving Heart, Understanding Your Grief, and many other bestselling books on healing in grief. He lives in Fort Collins, Colorado.

Read an Excerpt

Healing a Grandparents Grieving Heart

100 Practical Ideas After Your Grandchildren Dies


By Alan D. Wolfelt

Center for Loss and Life Transition

Copyright © 2014 Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-61722-199-6



CHAPTER 1

1.

GIVE YOURSELF PERMISSION TO MOURN


"What a bargain grandchildren are! I give them my loose change, and they give me a million dollars' worth of pleasure."

— Gene Perret

• You have experienced the loss of a grandchild. Your grief is very real. This death will affect you physically, emotionally, socially, intellectually, and spiritually.

• Sometimes grandparents set aside or discount their own grief because they are so focused on worrying about and supporting their grieving child (the grandchild's parent). Yes, your child very much needs and deserves your love and support right now. But you also need love and support.

• If you had a relationship with the grandchild who died, you will grieve. If your relationship was close, your grief will likely be profound and everlasting. If your relationship was not close, you may grieve the relationship you wish you could have had and regret the fact that it is now too late.

• No matter how old we are, no matter how many friends and family members die over the course of our lives, we grieve. Each time, our grief is as unique as the person who died and our relationship with him. Just because we are older does not mean we are "used" to death and take it in stride without being affected by it.


CARPE DIEM

Place a framed photo of your grandchild on your nightstand or somewhere you will see it first thing when you wake up and last thing before you go to sleep. Tell him how much you miss him.

2.

UNDERSTAND THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN GRIEF AND MOURNING


"What happens when people open their hearts? They get better."

— Haruki Murakami

• Grief is the constellation of internal thoughts and feelings we have when someone we love dies. Grief is the weight in the chest, the churning in the gut, the unspeakable thoughts and feelings.

• Mourning is the outward expression of our grief. Mourning is crying, journaling, creating artwork, talking to others about the death, telling the story, speaking the unspeakable.

• Here's a way to remember which is which: The "i" in grief stands for what I feel inside. The "u" in mourn reminds me to share my grief with you.

• Everyone grieves when someone loved dies, but if we are to heal, we must also mourn.

• Many of the ideas in this book are intended to help you mourn the death of your grandchild, to express your grief outside of yourself. Over time, and with the support of others, to mourn is to heal.


CARPE DIEM:

Ask yourself this: Have I truly been mourning the death of my grandchild, or have I restricted myself to grieving?

3.

REMEMBER THAT LOVE NEVER ENDS


"Death ends a life, not a relationship."

— Mitch Albom

• You are probably old and wise enough by now to have learned that love never ends.

• Do you love your grandchild any less today than you did before his death? Of course not! Your love for your child and your grandchild (and theirs for you) will go on. I believe that they will go on forever. What do you believe?

• Your relationship with your grandchild will go on, too, but it will shift from a relationship of presence to a relationship of memory. If you believe in an afterlife, you may know that your relationship of presence, which has been paused for the time being, will continue after death.

• If this was your only grandchild or your child's only child, you may struggle with labels. It's normal and necessary to think and feel this issue through for yourself, but rest assured, you are still a grandparent, and your child is still a parent.


CARPE DIEM

Some people continue to foster a relationship of presence with a loved one who has died by talking to the person's photo, writing him letters, connecting with his spirit in places of special significance, etc. If this seems helpful and healing to you, give it a try today.

4.

ALLOW FOR NUMBNESS


"There is a feeling of disbelief that comes over you, that takes over, and you kind of go through the motions. You do what you're supposed to do, but in fact you're not there at all."

— Frederick Barthelme

• Feelings of shock, numbness, and disbelief are nature's way of temporarily protecting us from the full reality of the death of someone we love. Like anesthesia, these feelings help us survive the pain of our early grief. Be thankful for numbness.

• We often think, "I will wake up and this will not have happened." Early mourning can feel like being in a dream. Your emotions will need time to catch up with what your mind has been told.

• For grieving grandparents, feelings of helplessness may go hand-inhand with numbness. At the same time you are in disbelief, you may also wish you could make it all go away — yet know that you can't.

• Even after you have moved beyond these initial feelings, don't be surprised if they re-emerge. Birthdays, holidays, and anniversaries often trigger these normal and necessary feelings. At times, feelings of shock and numbness may resurface for no apparent reason.


CARPE DIEM

If you're feeling numb, cancel any commitments that require concentration and decision-making. Allow yourself time to regroup. Find a "safe haven" that you might be able to retreat to for a few days.

5.

BE COMPASSIONATE WITH YOURSELF


"Life Lesson 3: You can't rush grief. It has its own timetable. All you can do is make sure there are lots of soft places around — beds, pillows, arms, laps."

— Patti Davis

• The journey through grief is a long and difficult one, especially for parents and grandparents who have suffered the death of a child. This death is wrong — it is unnatural; it is out of order; it is unfair; it is unfathomable.

• Be compassionate with yourself as you encounter painful thoughts and feelings. Allow yourself to think and do whatever you need to think and do to survive.

• Don't judge yourself or try to set a particular course for healing. There is no single, right way to grieve, and there is no timetable.

• Let your journey be what it is. And let yourself — your new, grieving self — be who you are.

• if others judge you or try to direct your grief in ways that seem hurtful or inappropriate, ignore them. You are the only expert of your grief. Usually such people are well-intentioned, but they lack insight. See if you can muster some compassion for them, too.


CARPE DIEM

What are you beating yourself up about these days? If you have the energy (and you won't always), address the problem head-on. If you can do something about it, do it. If you can't, try to be self-forgiving.

6.

BE COMPASSIONATE WITH YOUR CHILDREN, YOUR SPOUSE, AND ALL THE FAMILY MEMBERS GRIEVING THIS DEATH


"Each of us has his own rhythm of suffering."

— Roland Barthes

• Others are also deeply grieving this untimely death. Be as compassionate and nonjudgmental as you can be about their grief and behavior in the coming weeks and months. Give each other permission to mourn differently.

• Grieving family members are often not able to support one another well, especially in the early days of grief. They are simply too overcome with their own thoughts and feelings to be truly helpful to someone else. This is normal and not a failure of relationships within the family.

• Mothers (and grandmothers) sometimes feel that they are more affected by the death of a child. In fact, some research has shown that a mother's grief can be more disabling and longer lasting. Yet the intensity of feeling often depends most on each person's closeness to the child who died, not on gender. Fathers (and grandfathers) often feel the same depths of grief when a child dies, though these feelings are sometimes not expressed.

• Largely due to societal norms and expectations, men and women tend to mourn differently. Men often appear to be more stoic, and they may want to return to work faster. Women are typically more outwardly emotional and slower to return to daily routines. Yet in some families, these roles seem to be reversed. All these responses are normal and are not a gauge of each person's love for the child who died.


CARPE DIEM

Today, plan a time to talk to your partner or another family member about any unreconciled feelings you have toward him or her regarding the death, even if the death happened some time ago. Your goal is not to accuse or judge but rather to listen and to love.

7.

BE COMPASSIONATE WITH YOUR SURVIVING GRANDCHILDREN


"A grandparent is a parent who has a second chance."

— Author unknown

• Grieving siblings are often "forgotten mourners." This means that their parents and family as well as friends and society tend to either overlook their ongoing grief or attempt to soothe it away.

• What grieving siblings and cousins really need is for adults to be open and honest with them about the death. And they need to know that their grief is important, too, and that their unique thoughts and feelings are acknowledged.

• Share your grief with your surviving grandchildren and make time to understand theirs. The parents of the child who died may understandably be too overwhelmed by their own grief to focus on their remaining children. As a grandparent, now is the time to step in and help your surviving grandkids feel safe, heard, and loved.

• Sometimes siblings of a child who died are put in the position of trying to parent their grieving mother and father. Yet children need to be children. They are not developmentally mature enough to act as caregivers, and they also need caregivers to focus on their grief. If you see this kind of role-reversal happening in your family, I encourage you to share in the parenting responsibilities and caregiving in order to relieve and support the children.


CARPE DIEM

Take your surviving grandchildren out to lunch or to the park and spend some time talking about their feelings since the death. Find out if they are at risk of becoming "forgotten mourners." If they are, spearhead a plan to get them the support they need.

8.

BE AWARE THAT YOUR GRIEF AFFECTS YOUR BODY, HEART, SOCIAL SELF, MIND, AND SPIRIT


"Grief is hard on friendships, but it doesn't have to be. Sometimes, all it takes is a little honesty between friends. If we gently and lovingly explain what we need from the relationship during our time of grief, and what we are willing to do in return, we can turn even a lukewarm friendship into something special."

— Margaret Brownley

• Grief is physically demanding. The body responds to the stress of the encounter and the immune system can weaken. You may be more susceptible to illness and physical discomforts. Grieving grandparents often describe their grief as a pain in the chest or a physical ache. You will probably also feel sluggish or highly fatigued. Some people call this the "lethargy of grief."

• The emotional toll of grief is complex and painful. Mourners often feel many different feelings, and those feelings can shift and blur over time.

• Bereavement naturally results in social discomfort. Friends and family often withdraw from mourners, leaving them isolated and unsupported. Mourners often feel out of place in a setting they once felt a part of.

• It's very common for mourners to be unable to concentrate and think clearly. If, like me, you normally experience your share of "senior moments," don't be surprised to find yourself even more cognitively affected in grief.

• Mourners often ask, "Why go on living?" "Will my life have meaning now?" "Where is God in this?" Spiritual questions such as these are natural and necessary but also draining.

• All five facets of your self are under attack. You may feel weak and powerless, especially in the early weeks and months. Only over time and through active mourning will you gain the strength to re-emerge as a new, whole you.


CARPE DIEM

If you've felt physically affected by your grief, see a doctor this week. Sometimes it's comforting to receive a clean bill of health.

9.

EXPECT TO HAVE A MULTITUDE OF FEELINGS


"No one ever told me that grief felt so like fear."

— C.S. Lewis

• Grieving grandparents don't just feel sad. They often feel numb, angry, guilty, afraid, regretful, confused, even relieved (in cases of chronic or terminal illness, for example). Sometimes these feelings follow each other within a short period of time, or they may occur simultaneously. I often say that grief is not experienced as a single note but as a chord.

• As strange as some of these emotions may seem to you, they are normal and healthy. At times, you may feel like you're "going crazy." Rest assured that you aren't going crazy: you're grieving.

• Allow yourself to feel whatever it is you are feeling without judging yourself.

• Talk about your feelings with someone who cares and can supportively listen.


CARPE DIEM

Which grief feeling has surprised you most? Make a point of talking about this feeling with someone today.

10.

UNDERSTAND THE SIX NEEDS OF MOURNING


Need #1: Acknowledge the reality of the death


"When you are born, you cry, and the world rejoices. When you die, you rejoice, and the world cries."

— Buddhist saying

• Your grandchild has died. This is one of the most difficult realities in the world to accept. Yet gently, slowly, and patiently, you must embrace this reality, bit by bit, day by day.

• Whether your grandchild's death was sudden or anticipated, fully acknowledging the reality of the loss may take weeks, months, even years.

• You will first acknowledge the reality of the death with your head. Only over time will you come to acknowledge it with your heart.

• At times you may push away the reality of the death. This is normal and necessary for your survival. You will come to integrate the reality in doses as you are ready.


CARPE DIEM

Tell someone who doesn't know what happened about your grandchild today. Talking about both the life and the death will help you work on this important need.

11.

UNDERSTAND THE SIX NEEDS OF MOURNING


Need #2: Embrace the pain of the loss


"In the godforsaken, obscene quicksand of life, there is a deafening alleluia rising from the souls of those who weep, and of those who weep with those who weep. If you watch, you will see the hand of God putting the stars back in their skies one by one."

— Ann Weems

• This need requires mourners to embrace the pain of their loss — something we naturally don't want to do. It is easier to avoid, repress, or push away the pain of grief than it is to confront it.

• It is in embracing your grief, however, that you will learn to reconcile yourself to it.

• In the early days after the death of your grandchild, your pain may seem ever-present. Your every thought and feeling, every moment of every day, may seem painful. During this time, you will probably need to seek refuge from your pain. Go for a walk, read a book, watch TV, talk to supportive friends and family about the normal things of everyday life.

• While you do need to embrace the pain of your loss, you must do it in doses, over time. You simply cannot take in the enormity of your loss all at once. It's healthy to seek distractions and allow yourself bits of pleasure each day.


CARPE DIEM

If you feel up to it, allow yourself a time for embracing pain today. Dedicate 15 minutes to thinking about and feeling the loss. Reach out to someone who doesn't try to take your pain away and spend some time with him.

12.

UNDERSTAND THE SIX NEEDS OF MOURNING


Need #3: Remember the child who died


"Some are bound to die young. By dying young a person stays young in people's memory. If he burns brightly before he dies, his brightness shines for all time."

— Author unknown

• When someone we love dies, they live on in us through memory. Those of us who have lived a number of decades in this world know this well.

• To heal, grandparents and all family members need to actively remember the child who died and commemorate the life that was lived.

• Never let anyone take your memories away in a misguided attempt to save you from pain. It's good for you to continue to display photos of your grandchild. It's good to talk about memories, both happy and sad. It's good to cherish toys and other items that belonged to your grandchild.

• If you are grieving after a miscarriage or stillbirth, this need will focus on remembering your hoped-for expectations and dreams of the future.

• In the early weeks and months of your grief, you may fear that you will forget your grandchild — the details of her face, the tone of his voice, the special lilt in her walk. Rest assured that while time may blur some of your memories, as you slowly shift your relationship from one of presence to one of memory, you will indeed remember.

• Remembering the past makes hoping for the future possible.


CARPE DIEM

You might find it helpful to begin to write down memories of your grandchild. This is both a healing exercise and a way to hold on to special memories forever. Today, write down at least one memory.

13.

UNDERSTAND THE SIX NEEDS OF MOURNING


Need #4: Develop a new self-identity


"We define our identity always in dialogue with, sometimes in struggle against, the things our significant others want to see in us. Even after we outgrow some of these others — our parents, for instance — and they disappear from our lives, the conversation with them continues within us as long as we live."

— Charles Taylor


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Healing a Grandparents Grieving Heart by Alan D. Wolfelt. Copyright © 2014 Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.. Excerpted by permission of Center for Loss and Life Transition.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction,
100 Ideas,
1. Give yourself permission to mourn,
2. Understand the difference between grief and mourning,
3. Remember that love never ends,
4. Allow for numbness,
5. Be compassionate with yourself,
6. Be compassionate with your children, your spouse, and all the family members grieving this death,
7. Be compassionate with your surviving grandchildren,
8. Be aware that your grief affects your body, heart, social self, mind, and spirit,
9. Expect to have a multitude of feelings,
10. Understand the six needs of mourning Need #1: Acknowledge the reality of the death,
11. Understand the six needs of mourning Need #2: Embrace the pain of the loss,
12. Understand the six needs of mourning Need #3: Remember the child who died,
13. Understand the six needs of mourning Need #4: Develop a new self-identity,
14. Understand the six needs of mourning Need #5: Search for meaning,
15. Understand the six needs of mourning Need #6: Receive ongoing support from others,
16. Know that grief does not proceed in orderly, predictable "stages",
17. Take an inventory,
18. Take good care of yourself,
19. Let go of destructive myths about grief and mourning,
20. Help your child ...,
21. ... and get help for yourself,
22. Create a sacred space in your home,
23. Use your grandchild's name,
24. Tell the story, over and over again if you feel the need,
25. Be a good listener,
26. Don't say this,
27. Say this instead,
28. Learn about the Compassionate Friends,
29. If you feel helpless, talk about it,
30. If you feel guilty, talk about it,
31. If you feel angry, talk about it,
32. Understand the role of "linking objects",
33. Pay attention to your body language,
34. Talk to other grieving grandparents,
35. If you are alone ...,
36. Find a grief "buddy",
37. Offer practical help,
38. Offer your presence,
39. Adopt someone,
40. Be aware of other griefs you may be carrying,
41. Wear a symbol of mourning,
42. Express your faith,
43. Think young,
44. Give something away,
45. Organize a memory book,
46. Make a shadow box or memory quilt,
47. Be open with your child,
48. Be aware of the pressure cooker phenomenon,
49. Draw on your wisdom,
50. Go easy on people who say stupid things,
51. Look into support groups,
52. See a counselor,
53. Get to know your grandchild,
54. Befriend the other grandparents,
55. Give to the cause,
56. Keep a journal,
57. Arrange for a family photo,
58. Prepare to answer "The Question",
59. Visit the cemetery,
60. Start a new tradition,
61. Break a bad habit,
62. Meet your grandchild in "thin places",
63. Plan a ceremony,
64. Move beyond any bad feelings about the funeral,
65. Celebrate Grandparent's Day,
66. Make your grandchild's favorite meal,
67. Tell your grandchildren your life stories,
68. Break the rules,
69. Say what you need to say,
70. Be mindful of anniversaries,
71. Visit the great outdoors,
72. Watch for warning signs,
73. Update your will,
74. Move,
75. Listen to the music,
76. Laugh,
77. Cry,
78. Pray,
79. Avoid saying "should",
80. Steady the keel,
81. Write a thank-you note,
82. Write a letter to your grandchild,
83. Write letters to be read on a future date,
84. Remember others who had a special relationship with your grandchild,
85. Don't be alarmed by "griefbursts",
86. Mend fences,
87. Get a new perspective,
88. Start, renew, or give away a collection,
89. Practice random acts of kindness and senseless acts of beauty,
90. Redefine what being a grandparent means to you,
91. Take things one day at a time,
92. Take a chance,
93. Imagine the grandchild who died in heaven,
94. Establish a memorial fund or scholarship in the name of your grandchild,
95. Reassess your priorities,
96. Leave a legacy,
97. Live for your grandchild,
98. Understand the concept of "reconciliation",
99. Live each day like it's your last,
100. Embrace the ways in which you are growing through grief,
A Final Word,
The Mourner's Code,

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