Letting go is the final stage of grief

QUESTION:  Would you explain, again,  how the five stages of grief are survival tools?

 

ANSWER:  With his permission, I always appreciate sharing the insights of Mitch Carmody (www.heartlightstudios.net), bereavement counselor and writer for the quarterly Minnesota Sudden Infant Death Center newsletter.

First of all, the five stages of grief don’t happen in any order but rather can sweep over us all together, separately, or in any combination for many years.  Shock gets us through the impossible.  Denial holds back reality so we can return to society and function somewhat.  Anger jumps in and out at random and usually catches us off guard or comes when we are going into or out of depression.  Bargaining is a total mind game we play with ourselves, a seemingly never-ending internal dialogue of “if this…then…” that yields us no answer but gets us through another day.  Acceptance is the stage of grief that is reflected in the phrases “letting go, moving on, getting on with our life and finding closure.”  It is very, very important to understand that in eventual healing from the immense loss in our life, we find closure with the other stages of grief, but not closure with the person or situation that has been so valuable to us.

We usually come to closure with Shock first.  As a survival tool that is temporary by nature; Shock finds closure on it own and we are no longer numb.  It is then that we truly feel the pain.

We experience Denial when we know for certain that our loss is real.  We know this is not a dream.  The valuable person or situation is not coming back.  We begin to live the pain.  Eventually we find closure in Bargaining because it is a mind game and simply doesn’t work.  That leaves us with Acceptance.  We accept the pain.  We accept our “new normal.”  In the case of the grief from death, we also accept that dead is not gone.  We do not let go of the person we love, but we learn to live with the separation from our loved one.

We “get on with life” without the physical presence of that loved person.  We “let go” of illusions about what could have been.  We “find closure” in what we cannot change and we “move on” with our new future as best we can.  We are now our parent’s, or spouse’s, or child’s or friend’s legacy.  We substantiate their life by the way we live ours. It is in this letting go that we are free to hold on.

 

For support, call the toll-free Parent WarmLine at 1-888-584-2204.  Check out www.familiesand

communities.org

SportsPlus

Mower County

100 years of serving: VFW Post 1216 to hold century celebration next weekend

Mower County

Assessment to gauge future approaches to health

Mower County

Statewide pheasant numbers similar to 2023

Mower County

Political campaign, advertisement signs not permitted on public highway rights of way

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Convictions: Aug. 19-Sept. 2

Business

Tidal Wave Auto Spa partners with Autism Friendly Austin for annual Charity Day event

Agriculture

3rd graders to experience local farming at annual Day on the Farm event

Albert Lea

FEMA Disaster Recovery Center in Albert Lea to close next week

Mower County

Ikes hog roast fundraiser Wednesday

Mower County

Cedar Arts Fest features 17 artists, authors

Mower County

In Your Community: Mower County

Mower County

In Your Community: Duplicate Bridge

Mower County

In Your Community: St. Marks hosting variety show

News

Bringing back ‘bio supermarkets’: Program helps landowners restore vanished wetlands

News

Let the hues begin: Fall foliage colors coming to Minnesota in 3, 2, 1 …

News

Human remains believed to be hundreds of years old found on shores of Minnesota lake

News

A rare 1787 copy of the US Constitution is up for auction and it could be worth millions

News

Trump suggests tariffs can help solve rising child care costs in a major economic speech

News

Teen charged in Georgia school shooting and his father to stay in custody after hearings

News

Sluggish US jobs report clears the way for Federal Reserve to cut interest rates

News

Abortion rights questions are on ballots in 9 states. Will they tilt elections?

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Man gets prison time for weapons, drugs charges

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Austin man sentenced to five years for role in Albert Lea armed robbery

Business

Austin Utilities earns award for operational excellence