A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, April 27, 2019
Coping With Grief And Loss
We have to develop our own coping mechanism and we have to build on it while everyone is around us.
It is a sorting process.
One by one you let go of things that are gone and you mourn for them.
One by one you take hold of the things that have become a part of who you are and build again.
—Rachael Naomi Remen. MD
No matter what one would say about coping with grief and loss, the fact
remains that the experience is intensely personal and subjective.
Denial, anger, and a deep sense of personal disorientation are the
natural corollaries to losing a loved one, particularly in unexpected
and sudden circumstances. Many questions arise: does a part of the
person left behind die with the deceased; would the person left behind
ever smile again; or be able to pick up the pieces eventually and get on
with life?
There are many theories - some seemingly practical and eminently
sensible. J. William Worden recommends four stages which he calls
“dynamic tasks”: to accept the reality of the loss; to work through the
emotions associated with the loss; to learn how to cope with practical
tasks of living without the support of the deceased; and to find a new
place in one’s emotional relationship with the deceased. Sheryl
Sandberg, COO of Facebook who co-authored the book Option B: Facing
Adversity, Building Resilience, and Finding Joy with Wharton Professor
Adam Grant, lost her husband Dave Goldberg suddenly and unexpectedly in
2015 in the midst of a loving relationship. Both were young at that
time. The book was about how she coped with her unbearable loss.
Sandberg is quoted as saying: “A childhood friend of mine who is now a
rabbi recently told me that the most powerful one-line prayer he has
ever read is: "Let me not die while I am still alive." I would have
never understood that prayer before losing Dave. Now I do. I think when
tragedy occurs, it presents a choice. You can give in to the void, the
emptiness that fills your heart, your lungs, constricts your ability to
think or even breathe. Or you can try to find meaning. These past thirty
days, I have spent many of my moments lost in that void. And I know
that many future moments will be consumed by the vast emptiness as well.
But when I can, I want to choose life and meaning”.
There are people among us like Sheryl Sandberg with an abundance of
intelligence and strength of character who would eventually embark on a
Plan B after the loss of a loved one. I have no such claim to pretension
of my own fortitude, courage and intelligence. Without these attributes
I am at a loss as to how I would react or face life after an
inheritance of loss. In my destitution of these noble characteristics, I
find solace in another approach that may well prepare me for loss.
Amanda Taub, writing in The New York Times quotes Michelle Goldberg (no
relation to Dave Goldberg) who wrote in New York Magazine: “Not long
ago," she writes, "I learned the Arabic word Ya'aburnee. Literally, 'you
bury me,' it means wanting to die before a loved one so as not to have
to face the world without him or her in it."
Taub writes on: “Goldberg realized that those words captured her
feelings for her husband, and that having a child would be a way to
bring more of him into the world — and a way to hold on to part of him
if someday she lost him. Goldberg and her husband now have two children,
and they have enriched her life, she writes, in ways she would never
have believed possible. "Before there was one person in the world for
whom I would use the word Ya'aburnee, and now there are three."
In essence, the Sandberg approach and the Goldberg approach are one and
the same where both built family around them to (subconsciously) prepare
for the inevitability of loss. Only, while Sandberg had to build on the
life she built with her husband and children after the fact, Goldberg
has all three in her life. The principle remains the same: that the love
they found in their lives amply compensates for their inevitable loss.
The Hand on the Mirror: A True Story of Life Beyond Death is a book by
Janis Heaphy Durham in which the author writes about the death of her
husband Max Besler, who died of cancer at age 56. They had lived
together (until Max’s death) with the same abiding love that Sheryl
Sandberg and Michelle Goldberg shared with their spouses. But Heaphy
Durham’s book is different in that it speaks of a life that does not end
but keeps coming back at her through manifestations of her dead
husband. Alison Fraser who reviewed the book says: “This launched Heaphy
Durham on a journey that transformed her spiritually and altered her
view of reality forever. She interviewed scientists and spiritual
practitioners along the way, as she discovered that the veil between
this world and the next is thin and it's love that bridges the two
worlds”.
The issue is, no one mentioned in this essay lost everyone in their
family all at once and lived on to face the world alone. This bring to
bear the metaphysical sense behind Worden’s practicality: that the one
left behind has to find a new place in his or her emotional relationship
with the deceased. This is easier said than done. The world does not
move in a set pattern of expected results. All of us are “fooled by
randomness” as author Nassim Nichola Taleb said in his book of the same
title. All we can do is to prepare ourselves for what may come to us
with no warning. We have to develop our own coping mechanism and we have
to build on it while everyone is around us. That does not mean that we
should have no emotion. As Taleb indicated: “emotions give us energy and
they are actually critical to life in the day-to-day world. In other
words, the goal here is not to become a robot who can analyze everything
with perfect logic”. But a certain degree of preparedness could help.


