"Beyond Surviving: Suggestions for Survivors" (Iris Bolton)Beyond Surviving: Suggestions for Survivors by Iris M. Bolton (Especially for newly bereaved parents)
Beyond
Surviving: Suggestions for Survivors by Iris M.
Bolton
(Especially
for newly bereaved parents)
1. Know you
can survive; you may not think so, but you can.
2. Struggle
with āwhyā it happened until you no longer need to know āwhyā or until YOU are
satisfied with partial answers.
3. Know you
may feel overwhelmed by the intensity of your feelings but that all your
feelings are normal.
4. Anger,
guilt, confusion, forgetfulness are common responses. You are not crazy, you
are in mourning.
5. Be aware
you may feel appropriate anger at the person, at the world, at God, at
yourself. Itās okay to express it.
6. You may
feel guilty for what you think you did or did not do. Guilt can turn into
regret, through forgiveness.
7. Having
suicidal thoughts is common. It does not mean that you will act on those
thoughts.
8. Remember
to take one moment or one day at a time.
9. Find a
good listener with whom to share. Call someone if you need to talk.
10. Donāt
be afraid to cry. Tears are healing.
11. Give
yourself time to heal.
12.
Remember, the choice was not yours. No one is the sole influence on anotherās
life.
13. Expect
setbacks. If emotions return like a tidal wave, you may only be experiencing a
remnant of grief, an unfinished piece.
14. Try to
put off major decisions.
15. Give
yourself permission to get professional help.
16. Be
aware of the pain in your family and friends.
17. Be
patient with yourself and others who may not understand.
18. Set
your own limits and learn to say no.
19. Steer
clear of people who want to tell you what or how to feel.
20. Know
that there are support groups that can be helpful, such as Compassionate
Friends or Survivors of Suicide groups. If not, ask a professional to start
one.
21. Call on
your personal faith to help you through.
22. It is
common to experience physical reaction to your grief, e.g. headaches, loss of
appetite, inability to sleep.
23. The
willingness to laugh with other and at yourself is healing.
24. Wear
out your questions, anger, guilt, or other feelings until you can let them go.
Letting go doesnāt mean forgetting.
25. Know
that you will never be the same again, but you can survive and even go beyond
just surviving.
Reprinted
with permission from Suicide and its Aftermath (Dunne, McIntosh, Dunne-Maxim,
Norton
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