A Dusk Meeting

Dusk yesterday.
I knew the Lady by the field gate.
Not well, but we know each other’s name and houses and are friends on Facebook 
She had been crying and was trying hard to hide it
I hadn’t noticed because Roger was pulling at his lead and only realised after she had brought it to my attention and was hurrying a little embarrassed. 
She said something about a family member before moving on and I presumed her tears were tears of grief
Sometimes I think I see too much grief
Too much at work, certainly.
In my counselling I see loss in its many forms.
Loss of roles, loss of employment, of home, of loved ones and of relationships.
Losses of youth, of hope, of abilities to cope in life.

In my personal counselling with my old Irish sage,
I have explored my own grief reactions 
And have realised all too well that it never really goes away
You just live with it more peaceably 

Grief, is love which has no where to go

59 comments:

  1. Yes, if we live for any length of time grief is a certainty

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  2. That last sentence is just sublime.

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    1. It has a resonance with most people I think

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    2. Anonymous9:57 am

      Jamie Anderson said this , it is lovely

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  3. There is no life that is not marked by grief.

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  4. So terribly much grief in this world of woe. Unimaginable levels, really.

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  5. Barbara Anne4:12 am

    Your last sentence is so true for those who are left behind and who will miss the very dearly departed forever. But, oh, the love and wonderful memories that went before!

    Hugs!

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    1. Celebrating the good , is often the hardest thing to do and the hardest to accept as anger is often the easiest emotion to access

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  6. Anonymous5:14 am

    Nicely written, a sad welcome to Saturday morning

    Lee

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  7. I agree with your last sentence, and it is how I feel.

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    1. It still must feel somewhat raw for you andrew

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  8. Shelly Williams7:15 am

    We love and care therefore there is a good chance that we do or will feel grief and loss, but , hopefully, gratitude too .

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    1. We all love someone , not everyone is loved

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  9. If I'd never loved, I never would have cried. I sing that in my head whenever grief overtakes me. xx

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  10. I think you are right in that grief never goes away but we learn to live with it.
    Life would become unbearable otherwise.

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  11. Learning to live with it is all we can do. Hoping it doesn't slap us in the face too often.

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  12. Yorkshire Liz10:28 am

    A very wise comment, John, grief is indeed love which has nowhere to go. And when you have experienced or observed a lot of grief - or both - it makes you hypersensitive to recognising it in other people. But it also trains you to not be afraid of it, to recognise it as all part of the process of being human. And to learn to live with it and process it, because we never get past it, despite what the ones who have not yet suffer it might think.
    I hope your neighbour is OK and learns to push through it.

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  13. You expressed grief beautifully.

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  14. Oye, I used to believe that I would rather feel anything, even shame, than feel grief. However, counseling helped me to understand that unprocessed grief will, like the whack-a-mole game, pop up over and over until it is felt and honored. It's funny because grief can look like so many other things, because we are programmed to suck it up! Get through it! Move on! At least here in the U.S. that's the message we are taught from so many, not just our families of origin. I love how you can sense it in others, John, and have a ready, informed and willing heart to feel it and help others feel it to move through it.

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    1. Honouring grief is to allow you to feel the pain and accept it for what it is

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  15. Your understanding of the human condition, will make you an amazing counselor.

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  16. Beautifully put John. I'm currently grieving a death, and the slow eroding of a life, it's like having a lump in your throat and no way of swallowing it. The words 'choked with grief' are suddenly more powerful than ever.

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    1. Yes, the physicality of the emotion

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  17. A perfect description of grief.

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  18. I've read that last sentence before. My healthy, fit and wonderful husband was killed in an accident three years ago, and it seems like only yesterday. All the platitudes about learning to live with it or it gets easier, well it doesn't. Now totally alone with all those happy memories, tears fall as I know we will never share them again, or make new ones. My happiness has gone, and time will change nothing.
    J.

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    1. I’m so sorry….theres nothing I can say except I hear you

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  19. Bless you for that last sentence! It's what I needed to hear this morning as the first anniversary of a loved one's death approaches.

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    1. There is a pressure and research which state acceptance ids a final stage of grief. It’s been proven again not to be the real case

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  20. And as you point out, there are SO many types of grief. I believe that many of us hold grief that we don't even realize IS grief. And yet, it is.

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    1. You have hit the nail on the head x

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  21. Anonymous3:08 pm

    Your last line is so true. Cali

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  22. That's such an interesting observation, about love and grief. Being a counselor, you're of course bound to encounter more of those sorts of feelings than many of us.

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    1. Loss is a common theme throughout my career, in spinal injuries of course loss was both physical and social

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  23. Love this observation. Thank you.

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  24. Beautifully said. Have a lovely weekend, and enjoy your visit with Nu come Monday!

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    1. I will , I’m looking forward to it very much

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  25. What a beautiful comment. 'Grief is love with no place to go.'

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    1. Anonymous8:18 pm

      Yes,really.CatherinefromFrance.

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  26. Grief and loss seems part of the human condition. We all experience it at some point.
    Hopefully, we all learn to live with it and still enjoy life.

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  27. Anonymous11:20 am

    Grief is the price you pay for love. Gigi

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  28. Some very wise comments here, especially yours, John. Thank you for sharing - it helps. Jxx

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  29. Jo in Auckland7:55 pm

    I have felt grief so deeply that it was indeed a lump unable to swallow and a painful hole in my chest both at the same time. It certainly was love with no where to go. The loss was immense but thankfully the pain has receded to a dull ache which never leaves but occasionally becomes a piercing stab of remembrance.
    I hope your 2 weeks break brings you peace and joy.

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  30. Anonymous10:44 pm

    "Grief, is love which has no where to go"
    This could be the chorus to a song...:)

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