This year
I have a new year's resolution, and it sounds odd, but I want to learn to
grieve better. Weird right? It all
started at a Christmas Eve service in a cemetery and Christmas day away from
family.
I want to
learn to grieve well not because I am necessarily poor at it (thought I do have
a lot to learn) but because I have found grief to be among life’s guarantees
(like taxes and needing to eat food even when I don’t want to). Grief is nebulous, both in experience and its
source. My greatest experience of grief
has been the death of my grandmother, but I am currently experiencing grief for
the loss of my native culture and time with family. It feels odd to admit this and to use the
same English word and emotional turmoil to describe these two subjects, but my
feelings are probably more indicative of my own immature views of grief than
the nature of grief itself.
Grief is not a sign of weakness or unhappiness. I have been surprised how much I have grieved living in France, especially this holiday season. I mean we’re living in France! If this is not a dream life I don’t know what is (and it is an absolute dream), but grief is not mutually exclusive to other emotions. We humans must give ourselves credit for being complicated enough to feel more than only happy or sad or bored at any one moment in time. I am coming to terms with the fact a grieving process is part of cultural acclimation.
Grief is not a sign of weakness or unhappiness. I have been surprised how much I have grieved living in France, especially this holiday season. I mean we’re living in France! If this is not a dream life I don’t know what is (and it is an absolute dream), but grief is not mutually exclusive to other emotions. We humans must give ourselves credit for being complicated enough to feel more than only happy or sad or bored at any one moment in time. I am coming to terms with the fact a grieving process is part of cultural acclimation.
Beyond
grieving for the comfortable and familiar back home, where I can do mundane
tasks like buy toilet paper without culture-stress, this holiday season has
the added grief of being away from family at a special time of year. We were visited by all the emotions and memories
of Christmas past.
For Christmas Emily and I spent
five days in Salzburg adventuring in castles, cathedrals, and the Christmas
market; it was a magical time. I will
always look back fondly upon this unique opportunity. But we also grieved
being away from our families this Christmas.
To help each other Emily and I traded stories of holiday traditions and memories. While skype (even
with a poor internet connection) was a huge blessing, there is no replacement for being
physically present with loved-ones and there’s no point in pretending there
is. Such pretending is exactly the thing
I want to learn not to do.
1 comment:
really enjoyed this post. So much in it. look forward to next installment.
Post a Comment