Grieve Loss, To Leave Loss.
“He that conceals his grief finds no remedy for it.”
Turkish ProverbMuch like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz...I just wanted to find my way home. The grief that consumed me, felt unnatural, unreal...like a bad dream.
Grief is expected when someone dies, but rarely considered in other circumstances. Yet every person who experiences betrayal of any sort, must grieve in order to heal. It took me a while to figure this out.
How to Grieve
One must acknowledge and identify the loss created from betrayal.- Start by considering these five categories—(1) Personal Loss (2) Loss in the Marriage (3) Immediate Family Loss (4) Financial Loss and (5) Loss in Relationship with Friends and Extended Family members.
- Make a list of how your personal betrayal has brought loss in any of these areas. This is not for the purpose of dwelling on the negative, but to accept what needs to be grieved in order to heal.
- Take each loss and release it into God's care.
- Ask for specific healing in each area.
- This process may take days. You may only have the emotional energy to acknowledge and release one loss at a time. Don't hurry or begrudge your grieve.
I struggled along for five months determined to rid myself of the pain and my incessant urge to cry. I finally found a good counselor who surprisingly advised the opposite. She said I needed the therapeutic release tears provided. This knowledge influenced my decision to rent a apartment for a few months solely for the purpose of grieving.
Let me emphasize, I did not walk out on my marriage. David and I were in agreement. Nor am I suggesting this be done without professional advice from a counselor. (We did not have children at home, nor financial limitations, so this would not be possible in many circumstances.) The point I am making, is the importance of taking time to purposefully grieve.
I needed space and freedom to release the pain. I wept every night for three months. Like a river runs after a spring deluge, the tears flowed freely. Shock, questions, anger and sorrow, bled together, but grief dominated. When I returned home the tears did not instantly stop, but I had completed a huge part of the grief process.
Take time for professional counseling and allow your grief to flow. Life will be messy, but every day brings you one day closer to healing.
Although there will be times you cannot imagine the pain ever abating, choose to believe. Saturate your mind with these truths. God loves you, and God will not forsake you.
However, God may ask you to let your sorrow flow, in order to let it go. Though disorientation, extreme sorrow and depression often rule the day, they are not going to rule your future. Believe that you will ascend out of your pit of grief no matter how hard the climb.
To circumvent the process of grieving, you will circumvent your healing. There is only one road and that’s through the pain… not around it, over it, or camping out in it. Rather, one step placed strategically in front of another.
Remain hopeful, there is an end to the pain. I assure you God does bring healing.
Psalm 30:5 Weeping may stay for the night, but rejoicing comes in the morning. NIV
Your morning will come.
BELIEVE.
When you subscribe to the blog, we will send you an e-mail when there are new updates on the site so you wouldn't miss them.
About the author
Blossom Turner is an award-winning novelist, and a free-lance writer published in Chicken Soup and Kernels of Hope anthologies, and former newspaper columnist on health and fitness. A Word Guild semi-finalist for Anna's Secret, Katherine's Arrangement, Amelia’s Heartsong, and a Word Guild winner for Best Romance for Lucinda’s Defender. She has found her home in the writing of historical fiction but is open to wherever God leads. The many 5-star reviews attest to the power of love and romance authentically woven into the Shenandoah Bride Series about five sisters and their five love stories.
Blossom lives in British Columbia, Canada, with her husband, David, of forty years and their dog Lacey named after Lacey Spring, Virginia, where this series takes place. A former businesswoman, personal trainer, and mother of two grown children she is now pursuing her lifelong dream of writing full-time. A hopeless romantic at heart, she believes all story should give the reader significant entertainment value. However, her writing embodies the struggles of real life. She infuses the reality of suffering with the hope of Christ to give a healthy dose of relatable encouragement to her reader. Her desire is to leave the reader with a yearning to live for Christ on a deeper level, or at the very least, create a hunger to seek for more.
Co-author Suzie Zanewhich
Suzie is a certified life coach, leader of emotional health, and resource specialist. She has found her niche as a soul coach.
Suzie finds purpose in empowering individuals to move towards growth, healing, and alignment with their authentic self. Suzie is driven by a calling to live authentically, as the person God created her to be, to reach her fullest potential and lead others to do the same. Her passion is to help others find meaning through discovering their strengths, gifts, personality, temperament and core values.
Suzie is a life-long learner, continuously immersing herself in new courses to learn more about human behaviour, relationships, psychology, child development, emotions, trauma and healing. Because of her craving to always learn more she has earned the title of resource specialist in the area of self-discovery.
Suzie Zanewich lives with her husband in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. She has a patchwork family of four grown children, two daughters, two sons and three granddaughters.
Comments