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Kathy's Kasbah
Wednesday, 30 March 2005
For Those Who Tried Tough Love
REFLECTIONS OF A SURVIVOR
Take the Forgiveness Road

We Face A "Bigger" Grieving Process!

Survivors of suicide, those who grieve a suicide death, experience many
explosive emotions in the aftermath of their loss. Our grieving is
complicated by the nature of the death (which was volitional), the history
of the relationship with the victim (which was often stormy), and the
survivor's ability to grieve the losses of life (which is sometimes
impaired).

We spend a season in the protective fog of shock before we face inevitable,
but overwhelming and immobilizing, blasts of anger, guilt, shame, and
emotional
pain (sadness and tears).

Whether we reach the final phase of the grieving process - acceptance of our
circumstance and restoration to a life of stewardship and joy - will depend
on our ability to feel these emotions, share them with other safe
people in order to diminish their power over us, and ultimately to release
the strangle-hold they have on our lives.


Doing the "Right Thing" Doesn't Feel Like It To Me!

Some of us have had to make difficult decisions in our relationship with a
loved one who sometimes (often ?) refused to make their own healthy adult
decisions. The final poor choice they made was to end their life rather
than effect mature changes in their lives or face the consequences of our
"tough love" actions. In short, we stopped enabling their self-destructive
behavior and they chose literal and ultimate self-destruction - they
suicided.

Our "tough love" had a shattering impact and feels like a very poor decision
on our part. So we ask ourselves yet another tough question that survivors
face.
Would we rather have had self-protective boundaries and experience a
suicide loss, or remain in our dysfunction and, hopefully, keep our loved
one alive, in whatever their condition?

The answer to this one is very illusive, and moot, because we,
unfortunately, don't have the option to put our lives on instant replay and
try again. In our
case we don't get a second chance to change the outcome. What we can do is
choose our reaction to the outcome.


I Will Exchange My Guilt for Grace!

I will need to experience my guilt for a season, and I will want to sift
through it to find the truth and the lies about my responsibility for my
child's suicide. When I have done that for a sufficient period of time
(which
is unique to my process) I will take the forgiveness road - which, in my
opinion, is inherent in the final acceptance phase of grieving.

I will stop blaming myself and others, cancel their (and my) debt, and
continue on the path of freedom and recovery.

Linda L. Flatt ~ June 1997



Posted by az/maroc at 1:07 PM MST
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