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Home > Dealing with Grief & Loss > Miracles? 

Poetry workshop focuses on grief and loss - Tacoma Weekly

Poetry workshop focuses on grief and loss
Tacoma Weekly, WA - 1 hour ago
“Writing about my loss was a very important and healing experience for me,” she said. She started her grief and loss writing workshop two years ago to help ...

Miracles?

If we were to organize a list of the thorniest problems for the bereaved, certainly somewhere near the top would be the question of miracles. Everybody has heard anecdotal stories of certain people who have suffered incredible, life-threatening injuries or illness, but who have somehow recovered against all odds. A woman who has been in a coma for two years suddenly hears her husband's voice and awakens. A teenage victim of an automobile accident who was reportedly given no hope of recovery finally responds to the unwavering faith and persistent attention of a loving mother...and on it goes.

Depending on who's doing the reporting, the stories can range from inspirational to downright incredible! They demand our attention from the front pages of our daily newspapers or on our TV screens and they are recorded in detail in countless books and magazines. But it is because of their rarity that these stories are so prominent. Those of us whose loved ones died occupy by far the more populous arenas.

Make no mistake here. No one is happier for these victims and their families than the bereaved. The grief-stricken whose outcome was not so positive know only too well the pain and suffering that these families have been spared. We really do rejoice with them in their victories. We also, however, have to wonder if they ever take into consideration that the cavalier accounting of their experiences can be like an arrow through our hearts?

When we are exposed to the gospel of someone who by all rights should have died, but didn't, we are often told that it was prayer or faith or enormous self-discipline on the part of a loved one that "pulled them back." It's not that we question their faith or their determination, we're just wondering why it didn't work for us, too. We wonder why it feels like we failed-or worse, as if God just didn't care about us. (Lots of times, I think we're mad at God when our arrows should really be pointed at some of the people who need a little more education, and maybe some manners.)

We loved, too; we cared, prayed, talked, sang, read and stood by with vigilance while the lives of our loved ones slipped away from us. "Did God love us less?" we ask. "Was there even a moment when our attention was elsewhere, and it shouldn't have been?" We torture ourselves with the inquisition of guilt, regret and remorse. Our muscles turn to jelly, and tears fill our eyes as we replay in our minds the scenarios of agony that have slipped beyond our earthly grasp. We stumble around the "what ifs" and "if onlys"-sometimes for the rest of our days.

Though our faith may tell us that we're just as valuable to God as anybody else, we're tangled up in our feelings. Grief hurts so much anyway, and if we add spiritual failure, it becomes nearly unbearable.

Miracles are just that, miracles. They do not happen casually or often; if they did, they wouldn't be miracles. Their purpose is to alert us to God's message, not to call attention to man's skill or power. They were not meant to make us defeated or discouraged because they didn't happen to us or to those we love.

When Jesus called Lazarus forth from the grave, He said, "Lazarus, come forth." It has been suggested that had He not said Lazarus' name, all the deceased would have been raised! There were surely people in the area who either witnessed this incredible event or heard about it later. They had to wonder why not their loved ones, too? We don't know all the reasons or answers to that, but we do know one thing: Lazarus and all the "resurrected" like him still had to die again, sometime.

So, it would seem kinder if the temporarily "lucky" would try to refrain from sounding too pious and judgmental. They may yet have to stand in the shoes of sorrow.

Personally, I believe that our loved ones who died got the big hurdle out of the way. It looks like they got the real miracle!

Good Grief Resources (http://www.goodgriefresources.com) was conceived and founded by Andrea Gambill whose 17-year-old daughter died in 1976. Almost thirty years of experience in leading grief support gropus, writing, editing, and founding a national grief-support magazine has provided valuable insights into the unique needs of the bereaved and their caregivers and wide access to many excellent resources. The primary goal of Good Grief Resources is to connect the bereaved and their caregivers with as many bereavement support resources as possible in one, efficient and easy-to-use website directory.

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Loss: Holidays complicate grief (Cape Cod Times)
For families who have experienced a death or other traumatic loss during the year, home and holidays often hold so many memories that being there can be a minefield of overwhelming feelings. Visual Hallucinations Are a Normal Grief Reaction (Slashdot)
Hugh Pickens writes "Vaughn Bell has written an interesting essay at Scientific American about grief hallucinations. This phenomenon is a normal reaction to bereavement that is rarely discussed, although researchers now know that hallucinations are more likely during times of stress. Mourning seems to be a time when hallucinations are particularly common, to the point where feeling the presence ... Ashish Chaudhary still in shock, but thanks all who stood by him (New Kerala)
New Delhi, Dec 3: Bollywood actor Ashish Chaudhary, who lost his sister and brother-in-law in the Mumbai terror attacks, says he has not come to terms with the loss but wants to thank all those who stood by him in his hour of grief. Web site offers tips on dealing with grief, loss (Reading Eagle)
Yes, death is always with us, but the older we get, the more we seem to grapple with its presence. And death is never a welcome topic in our society. Pakistani PM expresses grief over loss of lives in Mumbai terror attacks (People's Daily)
Pakistani Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani Friday called his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh and expressed profound grief over loss of lives in the Mumbai terror attacks that left some 130 people dead, according tolocal press reports. Gilani strongly denounced the acts of terrorism in Mumbai and assured Singh his full cooperation, said the state-run APP news agency. He further said that ... Things to do tonight, Dec. 2 (The Bakersfield Californian)
* Blue Christmas? Church service tonight aims at those dealing with loss and grief in the holiday season. * Check out a comedy show at Randolph's. $5 cover goes to Toys 4 Tots. * Attend Hoffman Hospice's 13th annual Light Up a Life, tree lighting ceremony at the Marketplace. Durbin's tragedy: 'Part of him has died with her' (Chicago Tribune)
Dick Durbin is a senator at the top of his career and a father at the depths of his grief. A month after Sen. Dick Durbin's daughter's death, friends see a father at the depths of grief. Help and fellowship for those dreading a blue Christmas (The Bakersfield Californian)
If even a popular children's song warns against pouting and crying at Christmas, what is one to do when dealing with loss and grief during what's supposed to be the happiest time of year? "The pressure of being cheerful for the holidays when they aren't cheerful starts growing early," said Rev. Elizabeth Steele, interim pastor of First Congregational Church. Steele will lead a "Blue Christmas ... For Durbin, triumph and tragedy (Chicago Tribune)
A senator at the top of his career. A father at the depths of his grief. A man at a crossroads. A senator at the top of his career. A father at the depths of his grief. Dick Durbin is a man at a crossroads. The Tribune's Jill Zuckman explains. State mourns loss of Brooklyn warden (The Norwich Bulletin)
BROOKLYN — Members of the state Department of Correction are mourning the loss of Brooklyn Correctional Warden Robin H. Sutherland, who died on Friday.
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