The Dance of Grief and Joy

The Dance of Grief and Joy

MAUDE: On a zoom call yesterday, a woman shared her feelings of grief. I realized it is an aspect of coping with this time in all our lives, that we haven’t yet blogged about. She was experiencing the loss of a loved one and shared with us how she was coping with this by being present with all her feelings including her grief. She described her grief over the death she had experienced, as well as the loss of touch and other meaningful aspects of her life, the upset with the dire political situation and her grief over the terrible destruction of the environment (even though we seem to have a temporary improvement in that area – wouldn’t it be great if it weren’t temporary!).

I was deeply affected by this intimate sharing and could relate to her grief as well as her allowing herself to feel it.

In order to be honest and present in all our relationships, it is important for us to be in touch with our feelings and to allow them presence, to be present with them. I am not referring to wallowing in challenge and difficulty, but rather to acknowledging the sadness, the grief we feel at loss within our lives and relationships, while at the same time seeing clearly the joy and the beauty around us. They can both coexist. They do in most of us. The more we truly feel what is, the more we can be present and available to others.

This is a time of heightened awareness of all our connections. There is an added appreciation of each other that has come from the very fact of being distanced physically, coupled with the potential of loss of those succumbing to this virus, now or in the future. As is often the case, it can take not having something to realize how important it is to us.

We can be grateful for all we have, and even all the new additions to life (like the many zoom meetings now available), and still acknowledge our sense of loss for so many of the big and little things of our lives that are now gone. By really sitting with all of what we are feeling, and sharing these realities within our relationships, we can experience a deeper richness of what is, of the present we are in.

Be present with sadness and grief, while at the same time feeling joy and beauty Click To TweetPHIL: I have been an environmentalist since reading the Club of Rome report in 1972 and am becoming increasingly distraught over global warming, but reading Facing Extinction by Catherine Ingram has been the biggest blow yet. After a long exposition of the many woes we face, she writes about anticipatory grief, a phrase that accurately captured my sense of melancholy and loss.

And now we have a pandemic with one-third of a million deaths to grieve, an upturned society and an uncertain future. Four things you can do to cope with such upheavals:

  • Mourn
    There are people and places we will never see again.
  • Take Action
    Whether it’s writing to your representative, organizing your closet or calling your friends, taking action to alleviate the situation feels good and does good.
  • Change Your Timescale
    How will the planet look in a thousand years time? How will humans be in 2120? How will we be living with the virus 5 years hence? Just as a time-lapse video or a high-speed film camera makes the subject look radically different, so does changing the timescale by which we view a situation.
  • Be Present
    The sun still shines. Licorice still tastes good (to some people!) Clean sheets feel and smell delicious.

We usually write more directly about relationships, but this week, the balance of grief and joy demanded attention. Use it as a way to center yourself, and if you are in a relationship, be present and balanced for your partner.


Photo credit: Temogen Amato

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7 Comments on “The Dance of Grief and Joy

    • Thank you. Glad it spoke to you. Was there anything in particular about this post that struck you?
      be well
      Maude

  1. Many things in this post brought value to me… I loved learning about “anticipatory grief, a phrase that accurately captured my sense of melancholy and loss.” — I can relate to that phrase, though had never put it into words. I do cope with “ambiguous loss” due to my missing son. There are so many different kinds of grief. Each one of us grieves differently too. Thank you also for the “click to tweet” quote. (I did!) …I appreciated this whole post relating to what is going on now.

  2. Sent via email:
    Gylian Solay
    Aloha
    Mahalo hugs for that heartfelt response to Grief and Mourning at this time in our lives which is unique. It’s a world-wide phenomenon that is hopefully waking us up to a few realities:> We are not alone in this… and it shows how connected we are as a humanity…. No matter where you live, your culture, gender, race, religious beliefs. We are human beings sharing a human experience
    Keep Smiling and Being there for each other… it helps! Lv ya

  3. Via email:
    Barbara Maier:
    Thanks for your Sunday newsletter and the gems within it.
    It is heartening to me to read your posts and know that other kindred spirits are doing their very best in the world.
    Listening to the audio version of Facing Extinction, reminds me once again that the methane releases in the Arctic will be devastating beyond Alaska and how poorly it is discussed in the news and how hard it is to even talk about it. I have no idea how the younger generation will handle it all. But I appreciate the book being referenced in the newsletter and it is yet another way to share information with people.

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