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February 17th, 2009
The way grief works
by Jeff Guhin

This is a great reflection series that is going to be ongoing at Slate.   Someone extremely close to me lost someone extremely close to her over two years ago, and the story of grief never really gets easier–it just changes.  I think that this conversation really matters, and not only because it helps people to talk about their grief.  It’s also important simply to recognize that people are not really allowed to grieve.

Since my mother’s death, I have been in grief. I walk down the street; I answer my phone; I brush my hair; I manage, at times, to look like a normal person, but I don’t feel normal. I am not surprised to find that it is a lonely life: After all, the person who brought me into the world is gone. But it is more than that. I feel not just that I am but that the world around me is deeply unprepared to deal with grief. Nearly every day I get e-mails from people who write: “I hope you’re doing well.” It’s a kind sentiment, and yet sometimes it angers me. I am not OK. Nor do I find much relief in the well-meant refrain that at least my mother is “no longer suffering.” Mainly, I feel one thing: My mother is dead, and I want her back. I really want her back—sometimes so intensely that I don’t even want to heal. At least, not yet.

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