[Reviewed and updated November 1, 2024]
When people recover I should rejoice, but I don't. I feel disappointed. This seems to make me the most horrible person I ever met. I am being really honest now with you and you are at liberty to think I am a completely awful person. I wasn't like that before I lost my love. I hope this is a temporary state of affairs because it seems to suggest that bereavement, rather than make me a better, more understanding person has made me a monster of unfeeling. Please don't think me a horrible person, just temporarily one maybe?
My response: Oh my dear one, please disabuse yourself of the notion that you are in any way "horrible" for feeling angry or jealous or mad or anything else you may be feeling! This is precisely why I'm often saying, Judge yourself not for what you feel, but for how you behave. Feelings are neither right nor wrong, good or bad ~ they just are. We simply cannot control what we feel ~ only what we DO with what we are feeling! If you judge yourself for what you're feeling, you're in effect condemning yourself for being human. None of us is perfect, and there is not a soul among us who has not felt envious or jealous or even angry that someone else gets to live while our precious loved one had to die (or that we got the flu and they did not, or that we live with chronic pain and others have no idea what that's like). It's all part of that "life is just not fair" realization that hits all of us at one time or another.
I truly do appreciate how hard it must have been for you to disclose to me ~ and to yourself ~ that you were feeling this way. It takes a great deal of courage to admit to those parts of ourselves about which we're not proud. But when you share those kinds of feelings with me and with others who may read this, it only serves to endear you to us all the more, because we can embrace your humanness and know that you are more like us than not.
What is more, we humans are capable of holding more than one feeling at a time in our hearts. You can be angry that someone got to live while your beloved did not, and still be glad for that person's return to good health. This is when it's helpful to use a technique called splitting your ego: Say to yourself that a part of you feels angry about the unfairness of it all, but the rest of you is happy for the person who got to live. (Then you only have to think of part of yourself as imperfect instead of all of you.)
And remember, too, that none of us is immortal, and none of us is immune from grief. When your husband died, it was your turn to learn to live with the physical loss of him. Sooner or later, it will be someone else's turn to lose the one they love, and then they too will know what it is like to walk in your shoes. That is when your caring, compassion and empathy for them will shine. ♥
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Related:
Your feedback is welcome! Please feel free to leave a comment or a question, or share a tip, a related article or a resource of your own in the Comments section below.If you’d like Grief Healing Blog updates delivered right to your inbox, you’re cordially invited to subscribe to our weekly Grief Healing Newsletter. Sign up here.
Related:
- 5 Crucial Keys to Managing Grief Anger
- All I Can Be, For Now
- Apologizing for Expressing The Anger of Grief
- Bitter/Jealous/Angry
- Clenched Teeth
- How to Cope with Grief and Jealousy
- In Grief: Is Anger One of The Stages?
- In Grief: When A Friend Pulls Away
- Understanding Anger In The Aftermath of Trauma and Disaster
- Understanding The Anger of Grief
- "Vengeance Is A Lazy Form of Grief" Redux
- When Letting Go of Anger Isn't Possible, Helpful or Desirable
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