Understanding Your Grief: Ten Essential Touchstones for Finding Hope and Healing Your Heart

Understanding Your Grief: Ten Essential Touchstones for Finding Hope and Healing Your Heart

by Alan D Wolfelt PhD
Understanding Your Grief: Ten Essential Touchstones for Finding Hope and Healing Your Heart

Understanding Your Grief: Ten Essential Touchstones for Finding Hope and Healing Your Heart

by Alan D Wolfelt PhD

Paperback(Second edition)

$13.45  $14.95 Save 10% Current price is $13.45, Original price is $14.95. You Save 10%.
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Since its debut thirty years ago, this favorite by one of the world’s most beloved grief counselors has found a place in the homes and hearts of hundreds of thousands of mourners across the globe. Filled with compassion and hope, Understanding Your Grief helps you understand and befriend your painful, complex thoughts and feelings after the death of someone loved. Befriending grief may sound counterintuitive, but actually, your grief is your love for the person who died in a different form, and like that love, it’s also natural and necessary. Perhaps above all, Understanding Your Grief is practical. It’s built on Dr. Wolfelt’s Ten Touchstones, which are basic principles to learn and actions to take to help yourself engage with your grief and create momentum toward healing. This second edition maintains the content of the first edition but builds on it by adding concise wisdom on new topics such as the myth of closure, complicated and traumatic grief, grief overload, unmourned grief, loneliness, the power of ritual, and more. Excellent as an empathetic handbook for anyone in mourning as well as a text for support groups, Understanding Your Grief pairs with a guided journal.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781617223075
Publisher: Companion Press
Publication date: 09/01/2021
Series: Understanding Your Grief
Edition description: Second edition
Pages: 176
Sales rank: 19,893
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Dr. Alan Wolfelt has been recognized as one of North America’s leading death educators and grief counselors. His books have sold more than a million copies worldwide and have been translated into many languages. He is known around the world for his compassionate messages of hope and healing as well as his companioning philosophy of grief care. Dr. Wolfelt speaks on grief-related topics, offers trainings for caregivers, and has written many bestselling books and other resources on grief for both caregivers and grieving people.

Read an Excerpt

Understanding Your Grief

Ten Essential Touchstones for Finding Hope and Healing Your Heart


By Alan D. Wolfelt

Center for Loss and Life Transition

Copyright © 2003 Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-879651-35-7



CHAPTER 1

Touchstone One


Open to the Presence of Your Loss


"In every heart there is an inner room, where we can hold our greatest treasures and our deepest pain."

Marianne Williamson


Someone you love has died. In your heart, you have come to know your deepest pain. From my own experiences with loss as well as those of thousands of grieving people I have companioned over the years, I have learned that we cannot go around the pain that is the wilderness of our grief. Instead, we must journey all through it, sometimes shuffling along the less strenuous side paths, sometimes plowing directly into the dark center.


In opening to the presence of the pain of your loss, in acknowledging the inevitability of the pain, in being willing to gently embrace the pain, you in effect honor the pain. "What?" you naturally protest, "honor the pain?" Crazy as it may sound, your pain is the key that opens your heart and ushers you on your way to healing.


In many ways, and as strange as it may seem, this book is intended to help you honor your pain. Honoring means recognizing the value of and respecting. It is not instinctive to see grief and the need to openly mourn as something to honor, yet the capacity to love requires the necessity to mourn. To honor your grief is not self-destructive or harmful, it is self-sustaining and life-giving!


What is Healing in Grief?

To heal in grief is to become whole again, to integrate your grief into your self and to learn to continue your changed life with fullness and meaning. Experiencing a new and changed "wholeness" requires that you engage in the work of mourning. It doesn't happen to you; you must stay open to that which has broken you.


Healing is a holistic concept that embraces the physical, emotional, cognitive, social, and spiritual realms. Note that healing is not the same as curing, which is a medical term that means "remedying" or "correcting." You cannot remedy your grief, but you can reconcile it. You cannot correct your grief, but you can heal it.


You have probably been taught that pain is an indication that something is wrong and that you should find ways to alleviate the pain. In our culture, pain and feelings of loss are experiences most people try to avoid. Why? Because the role of pain and suffering is misunderstood. Normal thoughts and feelings after a loss are often seen as unnecessary and inappropriate.


You will learn over time that the pain of your grief will keep trying to get your attention until you have the courage to gently, and in small doses, open to its presence. The alternative — denying or suppressing your pain — is in fact more painful. I have learned that the pain that surrounds the closed heart of grief is the pain of living against yourself, the pain of denying how the loss changes you, the pain of feeling alone and isolated — unable to openly mourn, unable to love and be loved by those around you.


Instead of dying while you are alive, you can choose to allow yourself to remain open to the pain, which, in large part, honors the love you feel for the person who has died. As an ancient Hebrew sage observed, "If you want life, you must expect suffering." Paradoxically, it is gathering the courage to move toward the pain that ultimately leads to the healing of your wounded heart. Your integrity is engaged by your feelings and the commitment you make to honor the truth in them.


In part, this book will encourage you to be present to your multitude of thoughts and feelings, to "be with" them, for they contain the truth you are searching for, the energy you may be lacking, and the unfolding of your healing. Oh, and keep in mind, you will need all of your thoughts and feelings to lead you there, not just the feelings you judge acceptable. For it is in being honest with yourself that you find your way through the wilderness and identify the places that need to be healed.


Dosing Your Pain

While this touchstone seeks to help you understand the role of pain in your healing, I want to make sure you also understand that you cannot embrace the pain of your grief all at once. If you were to feel it all at once, you could not survive. Instead, you must allow yourself to "dose" the pain — feel it in small waves then allow it to retreat until you are ready for the next wave.


EXPRESS YOURSELF: Go to The Understanding Your Grief Journal on p. 10.


Setting Your Intention to Heal

You are on a journey that is naturally frightening, painful, and often lonely. No words, written or spoken, can take away the pain you feel now. I hope, however, that this book will bring some comfort and encouragement as you make a commitment to embracing that very pain.


It takes a true commitment to heal in your grief. Yes, you are wounded, but with commitment and intention you can and will become whole again. Commitment goes hand in hand with the concept of "setting your intention." Intention is defined as being conscious of what you want to experience. A close cousin to "affirmation," it is using the power of positive thought to produce a desired result.


Reconciling Your Grief

An important concept to keep in mind as you journey through grief is that of reconciliation. You cannot "get over" or "recover from" or "resolve" your grief, but you can reconcile yourself to it. That is, you can learn to incorporate it into your consciousness and proceed with meaning and purpose in your life. See Touchstone Nine for more on reconciliation.


We often use the power of intention in our everyday lives. If you have an important presentation at work, you might focus your thoughts in the days before the presentation on speaking clearly and confidently. You might envision yourself being well-received by your colleagues. You have set your intention to succeed in this presentation. By contrast, if you focus on the many ways your presentation could fail, and you succumb to your anxiety, you are much less likely to give a good presentation.


How can this concept of setting your intention influence your journey through grief?


When you set your intention to heal, you make a true commitment to positively influence the course of your journey. You choose between being what I call a "passive witness" or an "active participant" in your grief. I'm sure you have heard this tired cliché: Time heals all wounds. Yet, time alone has nothing to do with healing. To heal, you must be willing to learn about the mystery of the grief journey. It can't be fixed or "resolved," it can only be soothed and "reconciled" through actively experiencing the multitude of thoughts and feelings involved.

"Believe that life is worth living, and your belief will help you create the fact."

William James


The concept of intention-setting presupposes that your outer reality is a direct reflection of your inner thoughts and beliefs. If you can change or mold some of your thoughts and beliefs, then you can influence your reality. And in journaling and speaking (and praying!) your intentions, you help "set" them.


You might tell yourself, "I can and will reach out for support in my grief. I will become filled with hope that I can and will survive this loss." Together with these words, you might form mental pictures of hugging and talking to your friends and seeing your happier self in the future.


Setting your intention to heal is not only a way of surviving your loss (although it is indeed that!), it is a way of actively guiding your grief. Of course, you will still have to honor and embrace your pain during this time. By honoring the presence of your pain, by understanding the appropriateness of your pain, you are committing to facing the pain. You are committing yourself to paying attention to your anguish in ways that allow you to begin to breathe life into your soul again. That, my friend, is a very good reason to give attention to your intention. The alternative would be to shut down in an effort to avoid and deny your pain, which is to die while you are still alive.


Setting Your Intention: Spiritual Pessimism Versus Spiritual Optimism


In part, you can choose whether you intend to experience spiritual pessimism or spiritual optimism. For example, if you believe that God is vengeful and punishes us for our sins by causing the untimely death of someone we love, it will be next to impossible for you to make it through difficult times. Not only will you carry the pain of the loss, you will carry the guilt and blame about how sinful you are to deserve this in your life. By contrast, if you "set your intention" to be what I would call "spiritually optimistic," and believe that embracing the pain of your loss can lead to reconciliation, you can and will survive.


In this book I will attempt to teach you to gently and lovingly confront your grief. To not be so afraid to express your grief. To not be ashamed of your tears and profound feelings of sadness. To not pull down the blinds that shut out light and love. Slowly, and in "doses," you can and will return to life and begin to live again in ways that put the stars back into your sky.


EXPRESS YOURSELF: Go to The Understanding Your Grief Journal on p. 11.


Making Grief Your Friend


You cannot heal without mourning or expressing your grief outwardly. Denying your grief, running from it, or minimizing it only seems to make it more confusing and overwhelming. To lessen your hurt, you must embrace it. As strange as it may seem, you must make it your friend.


When I reflect on making grief my friend, I think about my father. Sometimes when I fully acknowledge that I'll never see my father physically on this earth again, I am engulfed by an overwhelming sadness. Then I, with intention, try to give attention to what comes next. Yes, I feel his absence, but I also feel his presence. I realize that while my father has been dead for almost four years, my love and admiration for him have continued to grow. With every day that passes, the love I have for my father grows larger, undeterred by the loss of his physical presence. My intention has been, and continues to be, to honor his presence, while acknowledging his absence. The beauty of this is that while I mourn, I can continue to love.


EXPRESS YOURSELF: Go to The Understanding Your Grief Journal on p. 13.


No Reward For Speed


Reconciling your grief does not happen quickly or efficiently. "Grief work" may be some of the hardest work you ever do. Because grief is work, it calls on your physical, emotional, cognitive, social, and spiritual energy.


"It does not matter how slowly you go, so long as you do not stop."

Confucious


Consequently, you must be patient with yourself. When you come to trust that the pain will not last forever, it becomes tolerable. Deceiving yourself into thinking that the pain does not even exist makes it intolerable. Spiritual maturity in your grief work is attained when you embrace a paradox — to live at once in the state of both encounter and surrender, to both "work at" and "surrender" to your grief.


As you come to know this paradox, you will slowly discover the soothing of your soul. Resist the need to try to figure everything out with your head, and let the paradox embrace you. You will find yourself wrapped up in a gentle peace — the peace of living at once in both encounter (your "grief work") and surrender (embracing the mystery of not "understanding").


EXPRESS YOURSELF: Go to The Understanding Your Grief Journal on p. 13.


"Doing Well" With Your Grief


In the lovely book A Grief Observed, C.S. Lewis wrote about his experiences after the death of his wife. He said, "An odd by-product of my loss is that I'm aware of being an embarrassment to everyone I meet ... perhaps the bereaved ought to be isolated in special settlements like lepers." As Lewis so eloquently teaches, society often tends to make those of us in grief feel shame and embarrassment about our feelings of grief.


Shame can be described as the feeling that something you are doing is bad. And you may feel that if you mourn, then you should be ashamed. If you are perceived as "doing well" with your grief, you are considered "strong" and "under control." The message is that the well-controlled person stays rational at all times.


Combined with this message is another one. Society erroneously implies that if you, as a grieving person, openly express your feelings of grief, you are immature. If your feelings are fairly intense, you may be labeled "overly-emotional" or "needy." If your feelings are extremely intense, you may even be referred to as "crazy" or a "pathological mourner."


As a professional grief counselor, I assure you that you are not immature, overly-emotional, or crazy. But the societal messages surrounding grief that you may receive are! I often say that society has it backwards in defining who is "doing well" in grief and who is "not doing well."


So, we often have these inappropriate expectations of how "well" we should be doing with our grief. These expectations result from common societal messages that tell us to be strong in the face of grief. We are told to "carry on," "keep your chin up," and to "keep busy."


Often combined with these messages is an unstated, but strong belief that "You have a right not to hurt. So do whatever is necessary to avoid it." Dismiss this trite suggestion also. The unfortunate result is you may be encouraged to pop pills, avoid having a funeral ceremony, or deny any and all feelings of loss.


"To suppress the grief, the pain, is to condemn oneself to a living death. Living fully means feeling fully; it means being completely one with what you are experiencing and not holding it at arm's length."

Philip Kapleau


Naturally, if you avoid your pain, the people around you will not have to "be with" you in your pain or experience their own pain. While this may be more comfortable for them, it would prove to be unhealthy for you. The reality is that many people will try to shield themselves from pain by trying to protect you from it. Do not let anyone do this to you!


When your personal feelings of grief are met with shame-based messages, discovering how to heal yourself becomes more difficult. If you internalize these messages encouraging repression of grief, you may even become tempted to act as if you feel better than you really do. Ultimately, however, if you deny the emotions of your heart, you deny the essence of your life.


EXPRESS YOURSELF: Go to The Understanding Your Grief Journal on p. 14.


Grief Is Not a Disease

You have probably already discovered that no "quick-fix" exists for the pain you are enduring. But I promise you that if you can think, feel, and see yourself as an active participant in your healing, you will experience a renewed sense of meaning and purpose in your life. Grief is not a disease. To be human means coming to know loss as part of your life. Many losses, or "little griefs," occur along life's path. And not all your losses are as painful as others; they do not always disconnect you from yourself. But the death of a person you have loved is likely to leave you feeling disconnected from both yourself and the outside world.


Yet, while grief is a powerful experience, so, too, is your ability to help in your own healing. In your willingness to: 1) read and reflect on the pages in this book; 2) complete the companion journal, at your own pace; and 3) participate in a support group with fellow grief companions, you are demonstrating your commitment and setting your intention to re-invest in life while never forgetting the one you have loved.


"We have to do the best we can. This is our sacred human responsibility."

Albert Einstein


I invite you to gently confront the pain of your grief. I will try with all my heart to show you how to look for the touchstones on your journey through the wilderness of grief so that your life can proceed with meaning and purpose.


EXPRESS YOURSELF: Go to The Understanding Your Grief Journal on p. 14.

CHAPTER 2

Touchstone Two


Dispel the Misconceptions About Grief


"Two roads diverged in a wood, and I —
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."

Robert Frost


As you journey through the wilderness of your grief, if you mourn openly and authentically, you will come to find a path that feels right for you, that is your path to healing. But beware — others will try to pull you off this path. They will try to make you believe that the path you have chosen is wrong — even "crazy," and that their way is better.


The reason that people try to pull you off the path to healing is that they have internalized some common misconceptions about grief and mourning. And the misconceptions, in essence, deny you your right to hurt and authentically express your grief. They often cause unrealistic expectations about the grief experience.


As you read about this important touchstone, you may discover that you yourself have believed in some of the misconceptions and that some may be embraced by people around you. Don't condemn yourself or others for believing in these misconceptions. Simply make use of any new insights you might gain to help you open your heart to your work of mourning in ways that restore the soul.


Misconception 1: Grief and mourning are the same thing.


Misconception

A misconception is a mistaken notion you might have about something — in other words, something you believe to be true but isn't. Misconceptions about grief are common in our society because we tend not to openly mourn or talk about grief and mourning. You can see how we'd have misconceptions about something as "in the closet" as grief.

Perhaps you have noticed that people tend to use the words "grieving" and "mourning" interchangeably. There is an important distinction, however. We as humans move toward integrating loss into our lives not just by grieving, but by mourning. You will move toward "reconciliation" (see p. 145) not just by grieving, but through active and intentional mourning.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Understanding Your Grief by Alan D. Wolfelt. Copyright © 2003 Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.. Excerpted by permission of Center for Loss and Life Transition.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Foreword i

Preface iii

Introduction 1

Surviving the Early Days 2

Understanding as Surrendering 3

Understanding All Your Griefs 4

The Ten Touchstones 5

Finding Hope 6

Divine Momentum 7

Healing Your Heart 8

A Word about Faith and Spirituality 9

Owning and Honoring Your Journey 10

Companioning Versus Treating 11

How to Use This Book 12

In Gratitude 14

365 Days of Understanding Your Grief 14

Touchstone 1 Open to the Presence of Your Loss 15

What is Healing in Grief? 16

Setting Your Intention to Heal 19

Dosing Your Pain 19

Reconciling Your Grief 21

Making Grief Your Friend 22

Spiritual Pessimism Versus Spiritual Optimism 22

No Rewards for Speed 23

"Doing Well" with Your Grief 23

The importance of Presence 25

Grief Is Not a Disease 25

Attention, Compassion, and Expression 26

Touchstone 2 Dispel a Dozen Misconceptions about Grief 29

Misconception 30

Misconception 1 Grief and Mourning Are the Same Thing 31

Misconception 2 Grief and Mourning Progress in Orderly, Predictable Stages 33

Misconception 3 You Should Move Away from Grief, Not Toward It 34

Misconception 4 Tears of Grief Are a Sign of Weakness 36

Misconception 5 Being Upset and Openly Mourning Means You Are Being "Weak" in Your Faith 37

Misconception 6 When Someone You Love Dies, You Only Grieve and Mourn for the Physical Absence of the Person 38

Misconception 7 You Should Try Not to Think about the Person Who Died on Special Days Like Holidays, Anniversaries, and Birthdays 40

Misconception 8 At the Funeral or as Soon as Possible, You Have to Say Goodbye to the Person Who Died 41

Misconception 9 After Someone You Love Dies, the Goal Should Be to "Get Over" Your Grief as Soon as Possible 42

Misconception 10 Nobody Can Help You with Your Grief 43

Misconception 11 If You're Focusing Too Much on Your Grief, You're Being Selfish 44

Misconception 12 When Grief and Mourning Are Finally Reconciled, They Never Come Up Again 45

Realistic Expectations for Grief and Mourning 46

Touchstone 3 Embrace the Uniqueness of Your Grief 49

Why 1 Your Relationship with the Person Who Died 50

Soulmate Grief 51

Why 2 The Circumstances of the Death 52

Expected Loss and Anticipatory Grief 52

Why 3 The People in Your Life 53

Is Your Grief Complicated? 55

Why 4 Your Unique Personality 56

Why 5 The Unique Personality of the Person Who Died 56

Why 6 Your Cultural Background 57

Why 7 Your Religious or Spiritual Background 58

Why 8 Other Crises or Stresses in Your Life Right Now 59

Why 9 Your Experiences with Loss and Death in the Past 60

Too Much Loss 60

Why 10 Your Physical and Mental Health 61

Why 11 Your Gender 62

Why 12 The Ritual or Funeral Experience 63

The Importance of Telling Your Story 64

Moving from Whys to Whats 65

Touchstone 4 Explore Your Feelings of Loss 67

Shock, Numbness, Denial, and Disbelief 69

Self-Care Guidelines 71

Disorganization, Confusion, Searching, and Yearning 72

Self-Care Guidelines 74

Thoughts on Resilience 75

Anxiety, Panic, and Fear 75

Self-Care Guidelines 76

Explosive Emotions 77

Self-Care Guidelines 79

Guilt and Regret 79

Survivor Guilt 80

Relief-Guilt 80

Joy-Guilt 81

Magical Thinking and Guilt 81

Longstanding Personality Factors 82

Self-Care Guidelines 82

Sadness and Depression 83

The Dark Night of the Soul 84

Normal Grief or Clinical Depression? 86

Self-Care Guidelines 89

Relief and Release 90

Self-Care Guidelines 91

A Final Thought about the Feelings You May Experience 91

Touchstone 5 Understand the Six Needs of Mourning 93

Mourning Need 1 Acknowledge the Reality of the Death 96

Mourning Need 2 Embrace the Pain of the Loss 97

Mourning Need 3 Remember the Person Who Died 99

On Going Backward Before You Can Go Forward 100

Mourning Need 4 Develop a New Self-Identity 102

Mourning Need 5 Search for Meaning 104

Turning to Ritual to Facilitate Mourning 105

Mourning Need 6 Let Others Help You-Now and Always 106

Journeying with the Six Needs 107

Touchstone 6 Recognize You Are Not Crazy 109

Time Distortion 111

Self-Focus 112

Rethinking and Retelling Your Story 113

Sudden Changes in Mood 114

Powerlessness and Helplessness 115

Grief Attacks or Griefbursts 116

Crying and Sobbing 117

Borrowed Tears 118

Linking Objects 119

Identification Symptoms of Physical Illness 120

Suicidal Thoughts 121

Drug or Alcohol Use 122

Dreams 123

Mystical Experiences 124

Anniversaries, Holidays, and Special Occasions 126

The Crazy Things People Say and Do 127

You're Not Crazy, You're Grieving 128

Touchstone 7 Nurture Yourself 129

First Aid for Broken Hearts 131

Nurturing Your Whole Self 132

Nurturing Yourself Physically 132

Twelve Commandments of Good Health 133

Nurturing Yourself Cognitively 139

Practicing Mindfulness 139

Divine Spark 140

Ideas for Cognitive Self-Care 141

Tuning into Your Love Language 143

Nurturing Yourself Emotionally 144

Ideas for Emotional Self-Care 145

Nurturing Yourself Socially 147

Ideas for Social Self-Care 147

The Loneliness of Grief 148

Nurturing Yourself Spiritually 150

Ideas for Spiritual Self-Care 151

What Are You Doing to Take Good Care of Yourself Today? 154

Touchstone 8 Reach Out for Help 155

Where to Turn for Help 158

The Rule of Thirds 159

How Others Can Help You: Three Essentials 160

Reaching Out to a Support Group 161

Getting Help in a Crisis 162

How to Find a Grief Support Group 163

How to Know If You've Found a Helpful Support Group 165

Reaching Out to a Grief Counselor 166

Mourning Carried Grief 167

How to Find a Good Counselor 168

Length of Counseling 169

Reaching Out When Your Grief is Complicated 169

Categories of Complicated Grief 171

Unembarked Grief 171

Impasse Grief 171

Off-Trail Grief 172

Encamped Grief 173

Getting Help for Complicated Grief 173

A Few Last Thoughts about Reaching Out for Help 175

Touchstone 9 Seek Reconciliation, Not Resolution 177

Your Patchwork Heart 179

Signs of Reconciliation 180

Managing Your Expectations 182

Not Attached to Outcome 184

Choosing Hope for Your Healing 185

Borrowing Hope 186

The Safety Net of Faith 187

You Will Get There 187

Touchstone 10 Appreciate Your Transformation 189

Change Is Growth 191

Befriending Impermanence Is Growth 192

Finding a New Normal Is Growth 192

Exploring Your Assumptions about Life Is Growth 193

Embracing Vulnerability Is Growth 194

Learning to Use Your Potential Is Growth 194

Your Responsibility to Live 195

Nourishing Your Transformed Soul 197

Doing the Work-Today and Tomorrow 198

A Final Word 201

The Mourner's Bill of Rights 203

Helping Resources 205

Further Reading 208

Index 211

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews