How
to Grieve
by Larkin Warren
Fifty
Things You Should Know by 50
AARP Magazine, July & August, 2007
"After the first death, there is no other," wrote Dylan
Thomas. That doesn't mean the ones that come after won't break your heart,
but it's the first that punches your soul's passport. Welcome, fellow
human, to a different country than the one you woke up to this morning.
The air's different here; so is the scenery. Your knees don't work so
well; in fact, you may want to fall to them.
For a precious little while, you are allowed to be stunned into
silence, or to shriek, or to talk—recounting stories of who he was,
what she meant to you, and how it all came to an end. Tell those stories.
Some people may try to enforce "The Rules," to wit: Enough of
This Drama Is Enough. Ignore them. Besides, if you treat yourself gently
and take the time you need, someday soon you'll hear the faint but steady
voice of your own good sense. Play music you love, sit in the sunshine
if you can find some, and if anyone offers you a hand, hold it. Let them
feed the cat, too, because they want to be useful. If your good sense
does not kick in on its own, help it along: scramble some eggs. It will
feel strange at first. But if you pretend that scrambling eggs is normal,
eventually it will become normal. Soon you can squeeze some orange juice,
too.
For some of us the stay in this new country seems endless. But
time passes, seasons change, and, truly, would those we grieve for want
us to mope? Come with me, back into the world. We'll return to this land
someday, all too soon, but in the meantime the garden needs weeding, the
bills need paying. Your other loved ones need you. And you, my sweet friend,
you could use a shampoo.
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