Grief Braided Essay | Teen Ink

Grief Braided Essay

June 13, 2022
By 890228494 BRONZE, Rochester, New York
890228494 BRONZE, Rochester, New York
1 article 0 photos 0 comments

I do not live by the rules of grief. When you have someone in your life die, you grieve. You dress in black, pay your respects and go through the five stages of grief; denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. The sixth step is to move on with your life and forget that minor bump in the road, even if the bump in the road is actually a deep pothole and destroys your path. Forget the week where your eating patterns were messed up, where your head was filled with images of a person you will never see again.

If I don’t stay on the path that grief gives me, is that bad? What if I never get over my loss? What happens if I get over it too quickly? What if I cry every day for months, then suddenly stop. Do I need to talk to a doctor? A therapist? What if I shove all my feelings of grief in a box, lock it up with chains, douse it in gasoline and burn it in the pits of my despair?

***

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross was a Swiss-American immigrant who moved to the United States after getting a degree from University of Zurich. She was a laboratory assistant during WWII and was fascinated by death and how people handle it. Throughout her life she worked with people struggling with grief from the death of a loved one. Kübler-Ross was a big advocate for the AIDs campaign and helped many families and friends who were grieving over their lost loved ones due to AIDs. She even experimented in out of body meditations trying to contact the dead.

She wrote around 20 books, the most popular being On Death and Dying published in 1969. She is credited as the creator of the five step of grief program. This process has helped many people, even after her death in 2004.

***

My experience with grief changes each time it enters my life and knocks on my door. The first time I was visited by grief was when my grandfather died. I was seven and knew he was sick, but it was only when my parents sat me down and told me that he was really truly absolutely gone, that I was hit with grief.

I didn’t see him much because he lived in a different state, so my every day life wouldn’t be affected. I skipped three days of school to fly down for his funeral. At one point during the service all of his grandchildren were asked to stand up. My brother and cousins stood still, dealing with their grief in their own way. I stood shaking and sobbed. I tried so hard to stop because people were watching and even the seven-year-old me was embarrassed by my grief.

After I flew back home, I was finished with my grief. I still think about my grandfather whenever I eat a corndog with ketchup, but there is no gaping hole in my heart that demands attention and hurts daily.

***

What do you do immediately after? Do you start grieving the second you hear the news? Or do you start before the body even goes cold so you can get your closure over with? Do you just eat macaroni and cheese and watch TV until the relaxation hits?

***

Later in life I would have two more grandparents die. My father found out about his dead father after dinner over a phone call. He dropped his phone and screamed out loud. I didn’t know my father’s father well at all. He never visited us, but just the act of seeing my father cry, made me cry. I didn’t fly out for his funeral.

***

The five stages of grief program not only relates to your mind, but your body too. It is backed with science, starting in your brain. After the death of someone in your life the pituitary gland in your brain is activated. This produces a chemical called adrenocortrope or ACTH that travels through your body and creates cortisone, a stress hormone. This hormone is responsible for all the feelings you feel when grieving. It can make you extra tired or it can make you an insomniac. The most common symptoms are denial, anger, stress and depression.

If a death happens unexpectedly, then this can traumatize your brain. The fear part of your brain becomes hyper-active and sometimes the emotional part of your brain, the hippocampus, shuts down.

***

Six months before my mother died she was diagnosed with cancer. It was a mild case and we believed she had longer than six months. In the hospital, I was not allowed to visit her. She came home for Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas. For New Years she was put back in the ICU. After February break she was gone. For that entire month the feeling of death loomed over me. I was in a constant state of silent sobbing and denial.

On her last day on earth, I visited a pale woman in a hospital bed. She was unrecognizable as my mother. She was surrounded by flowers, cards and gifts, as if she would “Get Well Soon :)”. She didn’t respond to me because she was in a deep sleep. I squeezed her hand and didn’t get a squeeze back. I cried and my brother apologized. We left and ate mac and cheese at home. I spent the afternoon watching TV until my dad came home alone, without the dying woman, my mother.

***

How do you know when the realization hits? It comes in waves. For me it’s any time I see a friend's mom hug her after school. Talk about boy problems or give her ice cream for dinner when she's sad. Then, the realization attacks me because I have no one to do that for me.

***

Over time all symptoms of grief get better. All the emotions you feel only get worse before they can get better. The average time span to get over grief is one year. It is okay if you take longer to recover than others. Talking with friends or a therapist can help. Don’t be afraid to reach out when going through this distressing period of time.

Grief is very unpredictable so if you don’t find yourself crying or staying up late, unable to sleep, that is perfectly normal as well. Do whatever you can to help yourself.

***

I don’t know if my grief is gone. I can’t tell if I will be grieving forever. I’m pretty sure, for right now, and in the near future I will still be grieving. Hopefully, there will be a time where there is not a constant ache in my heart. For now I will eat mac and cheese when I’m sad and grieve when I hurt. This is my own grief journey.


The author's comments:

I wrote this memoir to speak about my own personal experience with grief throughout my life and to imagine the pain others can feel. Writing this has taught me a lot about my own grief journey and the scientific reactions to grief people can have. 


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This article has 1 comment.


Lydiaq ELITE said...
on Oct. 9 2022 at 1:10 pm
Lydiaq ELITE, Somonauk, Illinois
172 articles 54 photos 1026 comments

Favorite Quote:
The universe must be a teenage girl. So much darkness, so many stars.
--me

Wow. You are so strong. I love this memoir.