May you find Peace during the Holidays

Happy holidays?!? Your love one has died, your world has been turned upside down, and all you want is the one thing that you cannot have --your loved one back.  The rest of the world goes on with the parties, the celebrations, the lights and the cheer, and you want more than anything to magically skip this season. What do you do? How do you make it through this time of year?  How do you find peace during the holidays?

 

  • Give yourself permission to change traditions.---- Just because you always have or never have done something, does not mean that this is what you need to do.  Ask yourself--is this what I want to do? If you have always stayed home, you can travel.  If you have always had the home with the decorations that the community slows down to admire, you do not need to decorate. If you want to continue, than do so.  But if not, try something new and see how it feels.

 

  • Involve your loved one in the Holidays –--- There are many ways to do this:
  1. Place a basket on your table and ask all of your friends and family to send you a brief memory of your loved one. Place them in the basket and read one every day during the holiday.
  2. Light a candle for your love one. Place the candle in a prominent location in your home.
  3. Hang a stocking for them and place a journal in the stocking. Invite family and friends to write memories and thoughts in the journal. Give yourself a present, and read these over and over every year.
  4. Get a special ornament to honor and remember your loved one, and place it in a prominent place on your tree.
  5. Attend a candle lighting in your community.

 

  • Plan an escape plan –-- When you are invited to a party that you may feel like you want to attend, you may go with the best of intentions and when you get there, it all changes. You no longer want to be there.  Drive yourself, or go with a friend and talk with them in advance about the fact that when you need to leave, you need to leave.  Communicate with your host in advance, telling them that you may leave and that it is not because of them or of their party, it just might be what you need.

 

  • Be honest with your family and friends.----If they want you to be a part of their holidays than your loved one comes with you.  This means that you are going to have feelings, thoughts and memories that you may want to share. If your loved one is not welcome than how can you go?

 

  • You do not need to share your feelings with those in your life if you do not want to.  You have permission to say, "I am fine", even if it is not true. You can feel free to share your feelings or not--you decide. 

 

  • Give yourself the gift of time for yourself.----This time of year can be so busy.  We have all of our responsibilities of the rest of the year, all of the special events, and we are still grieving.  The best gift might be a walk in the cemetery to sit with your loved one, or just some time to cry. You have permission to say "no" to others,  and to give time to yourself.

 

  • It is ok to feel joy and happiness.----As grieving people, we often feel guilty when we feel good.  We feel like we do not have the right to joy when our loved one is not here.  Pain and joy --tears and happiness,  are two sides of the same coin.  We feel what we feel!  Feelings are not right or wrong, so give yourself permission to feel good for the moments that you do and to cry and hurt when you are sad.

 

  • Your love one still is, and always will be, with you.  They are no longer physically here, but they are always with you right there in your heart. Love never dies!

 

  • If something does not work this year, you have permission to change it next year.

 

The holidays will never be the same but there is peace, and even happiness, to be found.  Love never dies! Give yourself permission to remake the holidays.   Blessings, Love and Peace to you during these holidays.

About the Author

On June 14th, 1999 my son Noah Thomas Emory Lord age 4 and a half died following complications of a tonsillectomy. That first day it was impossible to imagine taking my next breath much less taking the first steps on what was going to be a continuous walk through grief. On this journey I have cried an ocean of tears, screamed myself hoarse and felt pain so intense that it seemed unbearable. There are no magic words or process that take will take away the pain of grief. Calendars and clocks have no place in the grieving processes, what we all need are a set of tools that we can pick up and decide how and when to use them to re-build our lives. It was this realization that inspired The Grief Toolbox. The Grief Toolbox is both a resource and community for those who grieve and those who work to help them. With a desire to help the bereaved I have been involved with the New Jersey, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire chapters of the Compassionate Friends, a national support group for bereaved parents. I have served on the National Board of Directors of the Compassionate Friends. I have a passion to serve the bereaved and a desire to help the people who work with them. If you are interested in joining The Grief Toolbox community or to have me present or run motivational workshops please contact me at [email protected]. Together we can bring hope to the bereaved.

Helping The Bereaved