After a traumatic loss in your life, you may begin to experience a greater sensitivity to other losses. This sensitivity can express itself in ways you may not expect.
Even when the initial shock and trauma from our loss wears off, there can be a hyper awareness of other losses we have previously experienced. Especially if those losses have not been processed. It can even cause us to mourn old losses we thought we had already processed.
This sensitivity is not limited to your own experiences. You can also become sensitive to other people’s losses, or other traumatic events that are happening around you. Sensitivity to any kind of loss is sometimes heightened after a traumatic loss.
As I have said before, none of this needs to make any rational sense. Unfortunately, this sensitivity can be very distracting. It can almost feel like a setback in your grieving process. It is not a setback. It is just another aspect of the grieving process.
I personally experienced this in several ways after we lost our home. One of those ways was an increased sadness when I would hear about other traumatic events. Three months after the Carr Fire took our home, we had returned to Redding and were trying to reestablish a sense of normalcy in our lives. Right at this time, another tragic fire hit in Paradise CA just south of Redding. This was beyond my ability to process at the time and I went back into a sense of denial about that fire. Redding was still recovering from being evacuated, and now people from this new fire were coming here for relief and safety. I prayed for all involved when it came to mind, but I could not let myself even read about that fire for a while. I was not emotionally ready to process this new trauma right away. It was overwhelming to even think about. It took a little while before I could process what was happening in the trauma around me. There was more work that was needed in my own trauma, before I could process a new one.
Another way I experienced this was with having a hyper sensitivity to other people’s need for grace, due to what they might be going through, with no capacity to have grace for any of their unhealthy behavior. It was a weird experience of feeling compassionate and selfish all at the same time. Thankfully I was aware of the sensitivity, so I was able to manage my own responses in those interactions.
Another aspect of the sensitivity that I experienced was that I would randomly get triggered into feelings of old loss that I had forgotten about. Sometimes, when I would remember something, it would just be a simple disruption. Other times, I would experience considerable grief when I remembered what I had lost. That was not fun.
You may experience sensitivities like these, or in other ways I have not mentioned. The sensitivity you encounter will be unique to you, your losses, and your experiences. Allow yourself the permission to process through grief in the way you need.
There may be a time of delay before you can face the different losses that get triggered. That is OK. Take the time you need. I do recommend intentionally returning to the issues when you can. Stuffing the emotions and trying to deny them will not help. Your willingness to face these will determine whether you continue to stay in the loop of pain and sensitivity or begin to move forward.
If these issues stay unresolved, there are several responses that I have seen as a result. The most common response to unresolved grief in people’s lives is an attempt to control and protect the variables in their lives. This control leads to a limitation of experiences, opportunities, connections, and hope. Little by little, limitation and control eats away at the abundance of life that is available after the loss. The freedom, peace, and joy that is possible in the new normal becomes beyond reach. This doesn’t have to be the case.
A willingness to be vulnerable with God about these sensitivities will allow you to process your thoughts and emotions in a way that can bring peace to your mind and your heart. It will not bring back your old life. Remember, you will never be the same again, and your life will never be the same again. Letting God meet you in the sensitive areas of your loss will help you establish a new normal where you can thrive again.
When you can, take the time to invite God’s presence into those sensitivities, and allow Him to minister to you. You may not be ready for that yet, and that is OK. God is ready and willing to meet you whenever your heart is ready.
Blessings,
Ray