Archive News - Global news
home contact

Dealing with Grief & Loss
Dealing with Grief & Loss

News Article Archive
Articles Archive
Archive News

Top Articles


Euthanasia: How Will I Know When its Time?

Pippin needed assistance from his owner to get to his...
Read More

On Empathy

The Encyclopaedia Britannica (1999 edition) defines empathy as:"The ability to...
Read More

Adapting to the Loss of a Loved One: Three Tips on how to Cope

Have you ever sat down and played a piano where...
Read More

And You Always Will

I opened the dishtowel drawer for about the sixth time,...
Read More

How To Heal Your Heart

We all experience severe heart break at some time in...
Read More

Online Memorial ? A Dedication of Love for Your Departed Loved Ones

Life has always been a journey, a journey of finding...
Read More

Tenderizing

Recently, the magazine I own and edit got a hate...
Read More

Dealing With Grief and Loss - How to Mend a Broken Heart

What is it about Grief & Loss that upsets us...
Read More

When The Spirit Leaves The Body

Do you spend most of your time inside or outside...
Read More

Death Poem

During the two years of my husband's terminal illness, death...
Read More

How to Deal with Suffering

Reflect upon the following questions, and answer those you feel...
Read More

Dying On the Inside: A Childs Grief

The impatient tooting of a car horn startled us into...
Read More

The Walking Wounded

When my phone rang the other day, it was a...
Read More

How My Four Your Old Son Reacted To The Death Of His Great Nanny Biscuits

My nan was called Margaret and lived until the age...
Read More

Cultivate a Friendship with Death

Why We Fear Death"Men fear death as children fear to...
Read More

The Lesson of a Mothers Death

Dedicated to my mother, FlorenceNovember 11, 1920 ? May 25,...
Read More

Present Moment Awareness: Lessons From My Dog

I've always waited for the perfect moment to be happy:...
Read More

Sympathy Flowers

Sending a floral tribute is a very appropriate way of...
Read More

One Stray Tear

The delight lit my face as the couple turned the...
Read More

Made in Heaven

Consumed by my loss, I didn't notice the hardness of...
Read More

Why Dont We Talk About Anticipatory Grief?

I know anticipatory grief - a feeling of loss before...
Read More

Pope John Paul II

WHAT I LEARNED FROM POPE JOHN PAUL II ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I am...
Read More

Terminal Illness- Death and Grief

No one likes to think about illness and death, when...
Read More

Grief

If you have ever lost someone dear to you it...
Read More

Guilty, Your Honor: The Burden of Guilt After a Suicide

Guilty, Your Honor, I whisper.Have you ever done anything so...
Read More

Articles

Home > Dealing with Grief & Loss > In the Blink of an Eye 

Ten Tips for Coping with Grief and Loss During the Holidays - MarketWatch

Ten Tips for Coping with Grief and Loss During the Holidays
MarketWatch - 7 hours ago
You are of little value to your family and friends if you are not well rested and taking care of yourself first and foremost. 2. Find a way to acknowledge ...

In the Blink of an Eye

Today's Quote: "My house is burned down, but I can see the sky." Sally Reed, cancer survivor

Thirty five years ago this weekend, my father died. Killed when the Mack Truck Lear jet he was traveling on crashed into Lake Michigan, he died in the blink of an eye. There was no warning. His doctor had announced his perfect health a few days earlier. Yet he walked out our front door the Thursday morning of November 6 and never came back. I was twelve years old.

In the blink of an eye, pedestrians and bicyclists cross busy boulevards only to be hit by oncoming traffic. The blink of an eye separates consciousness from unconsciousness, wholeness from brokenness, and well-laid plans from disjointed futures. I was twenty when I was hit as a pedestrian and forty-five when I was hit as a cyclist.

In the blink of an eye, cars get sideswiped by speeding drivers running red lights. Cars mis-negotiate slick curves. Homes burn down. Pregnancies end in miscarriage. And loved ones hear proclamations of horrible diagnoses. Each one of these happened to people in my circle of love since August of this year.

In the blink of an eye, marriage vows are exchanged, babies enter the world, and toddlers take first steps. Athletes win gold medals and the Tour de France. Colleges accept graduating high school seniors, football teams win Homecoming, and actresses win leading roles.

None of us ever think about the time slot of a blink of an eye. Yet so much of life happens just there.

As Lance Armstrong writes in Every Second Counts: "Mortal illness, like most personal catastrophes, comes on suddenly. There's no great sense of foreboding, no premonition, you just wake up one morning and something's wrong in your lungs, or your liver, or your bones. But near-death cleared the decks, and what came after was a bright, sparkling awareness: time is limited, so I better wake up every morning fresh and know that I have just one chance to live this particular day right, and to string my days together into a life of action, and purpose."

These past thirteen days have certainly held their share of my own personal introspection, and of how I want to best string my days. In the blink of an eye, the doctor told me of my son's leukemia, as well as his chances for total healing. Armstrong hit it head-on: there is no warning to some of the bumps in life's journey. One minute you are sitting there minding your own business and the next minute you are smack dab in the emergency room watching someone drawing blood from your cancer-stricken child.

So just how do we deal with those events that arrive too suddenly, too quickly, and too unexpectedly? Horrible or wonderful: how do we make sense of the blink of an eye?

First of all, be spiritually grounded. Know thy maker. Have an intimate, love relationship with your Creator. For although you will undoubtedly question the events, cry for mercy, and pray for relief from suffering, it is more difficult to challenge the Creator when you realize that "you were fearfully and wonderfully made," and that "all things work together for good for those who love Him and are called according to His purpose." I have had my share of questions these past thirteen days?but at some point I have also had the distinct confirmation that the clay does not question the potter.

Secondly, be grounded in your relationships. Your spouse, children, parents, neighbors, and friends were all gifted to you. They were placed into your life by a loving God whose master plan orchestrated their intervention. I have no doubt that the neighbors and friends who have embraced and enveloped our family have been put there precisely to help us out during this significant time in our family's history. And as I reflect back on the various people whose paths crossed mine at different points in the journey, I am well aware of their precise placement at that distinct point in time. Again, from Lance Armstrong: "What surviving cancer teaches you is the magnitude of your dependence on others, not just for self-definition, but for your mere existence. Cancer robs you of your independence; you're reliant on friends, family, and complete strangers, stoic doctors and nurses, and when you finally recover you're never casual about your place in the human chain."

Lastly, cast a wide net. Allow complete strangers to enter your world and meet you exactly where you are. During times of tragedy as well as during times of joy: allow others to indulge their goodwill with acts of hospitality and generosity. The circle of life goes round and round?.and it will be your turn one day to return all of those favors.

Experiences that happen in the blink of an eye are meant to be shared. Through your suffering or through your joy, others will want to enter into your life equation. Let them. For life that happens in the blink of an eye was never meant to be lived alone. If we can share these blinks with others, and if we can both learn a lesson as well as pass one along, then we have, indeed, done something quite extraordinary. So in addition to living your life wisely, live it exuberantly. Live it with celebration with others. Wake up with fresh and vibrant expectancy. And graciously accept the goodness, serendipity, and divine intervention that will come your way.

Carolina Fernandez earned an M.B.A. and worked at IBM and as a stockbroker at Merrill Lynch before coming home to work as a wife and mother of four. She totally re-invented herself along the way. Immersed in the domestic, performing and visual arts, she has undertaken projects ranging from renovating old houses to singing onstage in Carnegie Hall to painting in oils. Strong convictions were born about the role of the arts in child development; homeschooling for ten years provided fertile soil for devising creative parenting strategies. These are played out in ROCKET MOM! 7 Strategies To Blast You Into Brilliance. It is available on Amazon.com, in bookstores everywhere, or by calling 888-476-2493. She writes extensively for a variety of parenting resources and teaches other moms via parenting classes and radio and TV interviews.

Feeling overwhelmed? Need encouragement? Parenting tips? Have a dilemma? Please visit http://www.rocketmom.com to subscribe to her free ezine and get a weekly shot of inspiration. Carolina lives with her husband and their four children in Connecticut.

Showing 1 - 0 of Articles
« Previous
Next »
Coping with reawakened grief (Lansing State Journal)
The holidays remind us of family and loved ones, especially those who aren't alive. Take measures to cope with anniversaries, special days and other reminders of your loss so that you can continue the healing process, including: » Be reassured. Remember that anniversary reactions are common and normal and that the pain fades as the years pass. » Prepare for episodes of grief. Knowing that ... Ten Tips for Coping with Grief and Loss During the Holidays (PR Newswire via Yahoo! News)
PROVIDED BY SAN DIEGO HOSPICE AND THE INSTITUTE FOR PALLIATIVE MEDICINE 'Grief During the Holidays' seminar set (Daily News Journal)
Bereavement is one of the most challenging experiences a person can face. As the holiday season begins, the loss of a loved one can be especially difficult to cope with. Alive Hospice is offering a free seminar in Murfreesboro on Dec. 1 that can help. Holiday grief class to be held (Chambersburg Public Opinion)
ST. THOMAS -- A class focusing on coping with holiday grief will take place from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at the United Methodist Church of St. Thomas, 360 Edenville Road. Grief program offers helping hand during holidays (Louisville Courier-Journal)
Holidays can be difficult for people coping with the loss of a loved one. That's why Hosparus and Ratterman & Sons Funeral Home are presenting "A Light of Hope" on Sunday. Thanksgiving and Grief (BellaOnline)
grief,death,holidays,thanksgiving,drugs,overdose DVD, booklet help teens deal with feelings of grief (The Arizona Republic)
Grief Speak is a DVD and booklet produced by Hospice of the Valley in collaboration with a West Valley school to help teens cope with loss. Parents, community mourn loss of teens (Northwest Herald)
ALGONQUIN – Students and parents at North Lawndale College Preparatory Charter High School are mourning the loss of the three students who died in a Fox River boating accident early Friday morning. Candles burn for their loss (The Walpole Times)
Its name comes from a Michelangelo sculpture that is the virtual embodiment of human suffering and loss, and its founders readily acknowledge it is the group to which no one wants to belong. Don’t Make Suicide A Secret (The Source Weekly)
Each day in the U.S. more than 80 people will take their own life, leaving behind loved ones, survivors to struggle with the loss, grief and all of those questions that begin, “Why…?” Too often survivors believe the suicide of their loved one is somehow shameful, or that they or their family are to blame. But research shows that more than 90 percent of people who die by suicide have an ...
Global news archive