









Sometimes loss doesn’t take us by surprise. Sometimes it is a slow, painful process as we wait for the conclusion of what we know is coming. We have already explored grieving after a loss. In this blog, we are going to explore grief that happens as it builds toward an impending loss.
This
type of grieving can be the result of many different issues. We could be
experiencing the harsh journey of a terminal illness with a loved one,
preparing for a move away from a loving community, walking through a failing
relationship, or living through the last years with elderly family members.
These are just a few examples of how we lose something very dear to us in a
gradual process. Instead of one big loss, we experience a slow,
piece-by-piece loss as we grieve the different aspects of what we are losing.
This
type of loss is not uncommon. We are actually experiencing this all the
time. As we grow, change, follow our dreams, and pursue our own path in
life, we are continually losing some aspects of our relationships, experiences,
comforts, friends, and family. Little by little we have developed a capacity
for the smaller, less impactful losses in our lives. The bigger ones are
usually the ones we remember and have trouble with.
I
have personally experienced this process several times in my life. The
first one I remember is preparing to move from my childhood home because of new
road construction. This new road plan went right through our yard and
included the removal of our house. This carried the weird feeling of
almost being erased from the neighborhood. It is still odd when I am in town
and I drive by the empty lot that used to be my yard.
The
toughest one I can remember was when my father was dying of cancer. His
original diagnosis came when I was still in high school. I was about sixteen
when we first found out. This was a difficult time for our family, and one that
impacted many aspects of my life.
Thankfully,
after treatment, his cancer went into remission and he lived for another
fifteen years. The really tough time was when the cancer returned.
For me, the last year of his life was a slow, painful dismantling of the
different aspects of our relationship. Little by little, there was less
of my father present. No more coffee together in the morning, no more
working together in the garden, no more house projects together, and no more
time watching him give my daughter a flower while he let her steal his hat off
his head.
I
did not fully understand what I was going through at that time. I mostly
just survived the experience. It isn’t uncommon for people to just
survive the loss. How to handle loss is not something we are usually
taught. It is something we each experience in our own way and we develop
our own methods of coping. Some of the methods are helpful, some are
destructive.
You
can experience all the different stages of the grieving process multiple times
over as you slowly lose aspects of something, or someone, you care about.
Sometimes, the anticipation of the final loss can be overwhelming as you
are still trying to work through the aspects of loss you are already
experiencing. The multiple emotional impacts can begin to bring confusion
and throw you into The Emotional Roller Coaster Ride of Grief
.