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The Center of My Life
(On the Death of A Spouse)
I lost the center of my life on Friday, July 13, 1984. Brenda, my wife of ten
years, succeeded in killing herself during a full moon while I was at an Al-Anon
meeting (where I was trying to cope with her alcohol and drug problems).
I had intervened on three previous suicide attempts, so I thought I was ready
for the possibility of her death. However, nothing the many doctors and
counselors we had seen, not the books I had read, prepared me for the
devastating grief that overwhelmed my entire being.
For the first time since childhood, I cried bitter, angry guilt-ridden,
frustrating tears for months afterward. I had virtually no energy, finding that
grief demanded most of my physical, mental and emotional resources. My first
wife, who also struggled with addiction, told me at the memorial service about
Iris Bolton, her book, My Son... My Son, and The Link Counseling Center. Support
from her book and her Survivors of Suicide group paced the way towards my
eventual recovery and transformation, though too often I would ignore the loving
advice given at those vital monthly meetings.
Survivors of Suicide and, at first, my Al-Anon group formed the backbone of
my recovery. Talk and the expression of feelings openly in the groups were
crucial to my one-day-at-a-time climb out of the black pit of my existence.
Because of my background (strict family upbringing, Army training, and years in
the corporate sales field), I was totally out of touch with my emotions.
I found in the groups a living, non-judgmental acceptance of my needs. The
group members who shared my pain, plus many caring and gifted counselors who
coached me on letting my feelings out paved a winding, pot-holed, bumpy road
back to feeling normal again. The road was often more like a roller coaster,
though as I would sink back into self-pity and denial in the early days, I had
to learn about the phases of grief, and more importantly, the immense patience
and forgiveness I needed to give myself.
There were precious few books then to ease my burden, but Iris' book plus the
works of Dr. Elisabeth Kubler Ross helped immensely. Since then, many new books
have become available to those of us who have to live on after someone we love
chooses to die, including Dr. Threse Rando's Grieving: How to Go on Living When
Someone You Love Dies, and James' and Cherry's The Grief Recovery Handbook.
I was encouraged by Iris and others to write about my feelings and thoughts
as a tool for recovery. I found great release in the exercise, which eventually
grew into my book, Life After Grief and my now full-time occupation as a writer
and speaker (one of the gifts that Iris said might come from my loss).
Long walks helped, as did extended soaks in a hot tub as I listened to quiet
music. When I felt there was some pain needing to come out, I would look at
pictures of us or play some of our favorite music, for I didn't want to take the
chance that suppressed feelings might cause physical problems. I treated myself
to chiropractic adjustments and massages as my grief ravaged body cried out for
relief.
A lesson, and also another gift, became my program to eliminate or reduce, or
just accept, some limitations in my own behavior. I learned of my own
codependence (a compulsive need to please and help people, even though they
don't ask to be pleased or helped). I discovered how to get better rather than
try to be perfect. Again with much help from supportive people, I rebuilt my
very fragile self-esteem.
Another important lesson I have learned: there is no right way to heal, just
any way. All the advice from all the sources could not give me a timetable or
prescription for my healing, I had to do it my own unique way, as all of us
must.
Even now, I sometimes talk to my wife, for another gift I received after her
death was a firm belief in eternal life. She is alive in some dimension I cannot
see, though I think she can hear me. Even if she can't it helps me to be able to
say what I must to her.
Slowly, oh so painfully slowly, my world turned right-side-up again, as time
healed my enormous psychic wound. Gradually, I could function again without the
confusion so prevalent during deep grief. I began to date, probably too soon,
but nonetheless a necessary step for me.
As the years passed, I discovered perhaps the most important gift of all from
my wife's passing. I found a new center for my life, the part of me that is a
part of God.
-By Jack Clarke
Personal Pathways Press. 2272 Powers Ferry Drive,
Marietta, GA 30067
770-977-2272
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