I picked up this book for an ulterior motive, that of which can be guessed from the title.
My grandma passed away 4 years ago almost to the day and, while I have gotten better at dealing with it, I am definitely not over it. She and I shared a very special relationship; she was my go-to person, my crutch, my companion and just always there for me. Losing her devastated me especially since I live abroad and I didn’t get a chance to see her before she passed on. The last time I had seen her was a year and a half before she had left us and that kills me till today. In a way, I still remember her at her best and not during her deteriorating health but I still wish I had seen her at least one more time.
I was told I “should have gotten used to it by now” and “get over it already, it’s been 4 years” and I felt like I was running behind some schedule that wasn’t even shared with me.
Turns out, this book was exactly what I needed. It was extremely validating. It explained the process of grief and how it’s different for everyone and has no fixed timeline or expiry. The intensity of the grief is directly proportional to the depth of relationship you shared with the deceased and is affected by a lot of other factors including our societal conditional and awkwardness around a grieving person. Besides, there’s always the matter that we all deal with grief differently and the bereavement process looks very different for different people.
In Grief Works, Julia Samuel, a grief psychotherapist based in the UK, shares select stories from a few of her ex-patients – extremely touching stories that are so different and yet somehow all relatable. She organized the chapters according to the relationship with the person lost: loss of a partner, a parent, a sibling, a child and finally facing one’s own death for the terminally ill. At the end of every one of those chapters, she includes a reflections section where she shares her general thoughts on how to deal with that particular kind of loss as well as some facts and statistics that are very essential to understanding grief more.
There is so much I would like to share in my review. It I feel the below quotes sum up the main takeaways…
“Death is the last great taboo; and the consequence of death, grief, is profoundly misunderstood. We seem happy to talk about sex or failure, or to expose our deepest vulnerabilities, but on death we are silent. It is so frightening, even alien, for many of us that we cannot find the words to voice it. This silence leads to an ignorance that can prevent us from responding to grief both in others and in ourselves. We prefer it when the bereaved don’t show their distress, and we say how “amazing” they are by being “so strong.” But, despite the language we use to try to deny death—euphemisms such as “passed over,” “lost,” “gone to a better place”—the harsh truth is that, as a society, we are ill equipped to deal with it. The lack of control and the powerlessness that we are forced to contend with go against our twenty-first-century belief that medical technology can fix us; or, if it can’t, that sufficient quantities of determination can.”
“Grief doesn’t hit us in tidy phases and stages, nor is it something that we forget and move on from; it is an individual process that has a momentum of its own, and the work involves finding ways of coping with our fear and pain, and also adjusting to this new version of ourselves, our “new normal.””
“…grief is an intensely personal, contradictory, chaotic, and unpredictable internal process. If we are to navigate it, we need a way to understand and live with the central paradox: that we must find a way of living with a reality that we don’t want to be true. It forces us to face our own mortality, which we have spent an entire lifetime denying, often through the creation of order – because if we have order, we have predictability and, most importantly, control.”
“It is often the behaviors we use to avoid pain that harm us the most.”
“Death steals the future we anticipated and hoped for, but it can’t take away the relationship we had.”
“According to research, men tend to vent anger, which can lead to violence, and women tend to suppress it, which can lead to depression.”
“People talk about “finding a way of living with” the grief from suicide; as a bereaved mother said to me, “You never ‘get over it,’ you ‘get on with it,’ and you never ‘move on,’ but you ‘move forward.’ You start to absorb the intense pain that such a loss brings in its wake and you begin, very, very slowly, to accept.””
“This does not mean men feel less pain than women, but rather that they instinctively manage their pain differently.”
“Our first breath of life signals the success of birth, and it is our last breath that will signal our death. We all know we will die—it is the only truly predictable fact—yet the incredible power of our minds maintains it as our best-kept secret.”
“We’ve seen in the case studies that the relationship with the person who has died continues, although in a radically altered form. They are loved in absence rather than in presence. Some people may need to do this a great deal, others only occasionally or on special days like anniversaries. A central pillar in the support of our system is finding ways to externalize that relationship.”
“…grief has a momentum of its own, and our work is to find ways to express it and to support ourselves through it, while realizing that over time it changes and we are changed by it.”