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Monday, 30 January 2012

COMING TO TERMS WITH DEATH


When someone close dies, it can leave us with a sense of loss that is overwhelming, unbearable and indescribable. 

Since death comes to all of us, we tend to accept mortality as part of life- that is, until we lose someone close to us  It is only then that we come to realise the enormity of death.

One of the saddest and most painful experience in life is indeed losing our loved ones.  The sense of loss is overwhelming, unbearable and indescribable.

I never understand the pain and the sadness his wife and children are going through.  The are deprived of a loving husband and a doting father. The fact that his children know that they will never have opportunity to repay their father in kind for the sacrifice he made is particularly poignant and hard to reconcile.  This will only exacerbate their grief.

While some people are fortunate enough to prepare for the passing of their loved ones who have been ill over a long period, others like my friend’s family were never that providential.
Because of the sudden death, they are denied the opportunity to say their farewells.  This makes their sense of loss all the more painful.

And it does not necessarily follow that the loss of a family member is always more profound than say, the loss of a friend.  It is not the type of relationship that determines the intensity  of grief.  It is the nature and quality of that relationship that matters.

Regardless, the pain and sadness due to bereavement are all not real and the bereaved will grieve in their own unique ways.
The immediate reactions to death can be a mixture of shock, confusion and denial.  It is often difficult to comprehend instantly the horror of death, and therefore, cutting oneself off from that realit y is an instinctive reactions.

This defence mechanism (denial), however, serves to delay the emotional pain only temporarily as the distressing symptoms will at some point emerge.  When it does, it does so with a vengeance.

The roller-coaster of emotions include hysteria, depressions, stress and anxiety or even numbness.  Problems with intimacy, eating and sleeping as common .
Some may develop physical symptoms such as irregular heartbeats , breathlessness and dizziness, which are symptomatic of emotional disease.

There are some who simply are unable to contain their anguish and pain, and so will cry constantly and without inhabitions.  Conversely, some would grieve in private to conceal their sorrows in spite of their great emotional distress.  Each to his/her own, one would imagine.

Besides sadness and depression, another emotion that stands out is anger.  Depending on their belief systems, it is quiet normal for some of the bereaved to question their own faith as they may end up cursing God or asking the rhetorical question: “Why?”

We often hear people known of their good deeds or kind-heartedness dying young and those who commit all sorts of hideous deeds living till old age.  It seems the good die young.

There is no consolation however to those who have loss their loved ones.  It does not, in any way,  lessen the pain. They may rather have their loved ones back.

Guilt is often felt too, giving rise to self-reflection or introspection.  Some, for example, feel they should have treated the departed better.  Other might even blamed  themselves for their passing.

The emptiness and loneliness felt by the bereaved further compound their miseries. It is for people going through bereavement to receive as much support as possible from family members, friends, colleagues, and even counsellors.

It will be a long and winding road to recovery as it takes time to gather the shattered pieces of their lives.

It helps for them to know that their dearly departed will never be forgotten, and they can do no other than wait for time to heal their emotional pain.

Time is a good healer. That said, some of the bereaved are simply unable to move on and they seem to have lost the will to live.  It is common to hear of people who lose their loved one to die of broken-heartedness..

Part of article written by Leon Chin (The Sun 27 Jan ’12) 








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