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How Friends and Relatives
Can Help |
Suggestions for the Friends and Relatives
of the Grieving Survivor
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Yes, there is much that you can do to
help. Simple things. This guide suggests the kinds of attitudes,
words, and acts, which are truly helpful.
The importance of such help can hardly
be overstated. Bereavement can be a life-threatening condition,
and your support may make a vital difference in the mourner’s
eventual recovery. Perhaps you do not feel qualified to help.
You may feel uncomfortable and awkward. Such feelings are normal
- don’t let them keep you away. If you really care for your
sorrowing friend or relative, if you can enter into his or
her grief, you are qualified to help.
In fact, the simple communication of
the feeling of caring is probably the most important and helpful
thing anyone can do. The guidelines, which follow, show how
to communicate your care.
- Get in touch. Telephone. Speak either to the mourner or
to someone close and ask when you can visit and how you might
help. Even if much time has passed, it’s never too late to
express your concern.
- Say little on an early visit. In the initial period (before
burial), your brief embrace, your press of the hand, your
few words of affection and feeling may be all that is needed.
- Avoid clichés and easy answers. “He had a good life,” “He
is out of pain,” and “Aren’t you lucky that...,” are not
likely to help. A simple “I’m sorry” is better. Likewise
spiritual sayings can even provoke anger unless the mourner
shares the faith that is implied. In general, do not attempt
to minimize the loss.
- Be yourself. Show your own natural concern and sorrow in
your own way and in your own words.
- Keep in touch. Be available. Be there. If you are a close
friend or relative, your presence might be needed from the
beginning. Later when close family may be less available,
anyone’s visit and phone call can be very helpful.
- Attend to practical matters. Discover if you might be needed
to answer the phone, usher in callers, prepare meals, clean
the house, care for the children, etc. This kind of help
lifts burdens and creates a bond. It might be needed well
beyond the initial period, especially for the widowed.
- Encourage others to visit or help. Usually one visit will
overcome a friends discomfort and allow him or her to contribute
further support. You might even be able to schedule some
visitors, so that everyone does not come at once at the beginning
or fails to come at all later on.
- Accept silence. If the mourner doesn’t feel like talking,
don’t force conversation. Silence is better than aimless
chatter. The mourner should be allowed to lead.
- Be a good listener. When suffering spills over into words,
you can do the one thing the bereaved needs above all else
at the time - you can listen. Is he emotional? Accept that.
Does he cry? Accept that too. Is he angry with God? God will
manage without your defending him. Accept whatever feelings
are expressed. Do not rebuke. Do not change the subject.
Be as understanding as you can be.
- Do not attempt to tell the bereaved how he feels. You can
ask (without probing), but you cannot know, except as he
tells you. Everyone, bereaved or not, resents an attempt
to describe his feelings. To say, for example, “You must
feel relieved now that he is out of pain,” is presumptuous.
Even to say, “I know how you feel, “ is questionable. Learn
from the mourner, do not instruct him. Do not probe for details
about the death. If the survivor offers information, listen
with understanding.
- Comfort children in the family. Do not assume that a seemingly
calm child is not sorrowing. If you can, be a friend to whom
feelings can be confided and with whom tears can be shed.
In most cases, incidentally, children should be left in the
home and not shielded from the grieving of others.
- Avoid talking to others about trivia in the presence of
the recently bereaved. Prolonged discussion of sports, weather,
or stock market, for example, is resented, even if done purposely
to distract the mourner.
- Allow the “working through” of grief. Do not whisk away
clothing or hide pictures. Do not criticize seemingly morbid
behavior. Young people may repeatedly visit the site of the
fatal accident. A widow may sleep with her husband’s pajamas
as a pillow. A young child may wear his dead sibling’s clothing.
- Write a letter. A sympathy card is a poor substitute for
your own expression. If you take time to write of your love
for and memories of the one who died, your letter might be
read many times and cherished, possibly into the next generation.
- Encourage the postponement of major decisions until after
the period of intense grief. Whatever can wait should wait.
- In time, gently draw the mourner into quiet, outside activity.
He may not take the initiative to go out on his own.
- When the mourner returns to social activity, treat him
as a normal person. Avoid pity - it destroys self-respect.
Simple understanding is enough. Acknowledge the loss, the
change in his life, but don’t dwell on it.
- Be aware of needed progress through grief. If the mourner
seems unable to resolve anger or guilt, for example, you
might suggest a consultation with the clergyman or other
trained counselor.
- A final thought: Helping must be more than following a
few rules. Especially if the bereavement is devastating and
you are closed to the bereaved, you may have to give more
time, more care, more of yourself than you imagined. And
you will have to perceive the special needs of your friend
and creatively attempt to meet those needs. Such commitment
and effort may even save a life. At the least, you will know
the satisfaction of being truly and deeply helpful.
|
Amy Hillyard Jensen
Copyright 1980 |
| "Please don't ask me if
I'm over it yet –
I'll never be over it. |
| Please don't tell me he's
in a better place –
He isn't here with me. |
| Please don't say at least
she isn't suffering –
I haven't come to terms with why
she had to suffer in the first place. |
| Please don't tell me you
know how I feel –
Unless you have lost a child,
too. |
| Please don't ask me if I
feel better –
Bereavement isn't a condition
that clears up. |
Please don't tell me at
least you had him this long –
When would you choose for your
child to die? |
| Please don't tell me that
God never gives us more than we can bear. |
| Please just say you are
sorry. |
| Please just say you remember
my child...if you do. |
| Please just let me talk
about my child. |
| Please mention my child's
name. |
| Please just let me cry." |
| Source:
Compassionate Friends Publication |
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