So I pursued it further,
trying to hit the nail on the head, so to speak, as to why this phrase has caused my skin to grow clammy ever
since I joined this griever's path.
Cheese is processed. Sausage, too. These are molded and made into products. In grief we are not processed as
though a food item and then delivered as a final product to the shelves of the grocery store. We aren't put on
an assembly line or a conveyor belt and pieced together.
Instead, I like to think that we are a growing creation, changing, due to the trauma and tragedy of losing a
child or loved one. We were thrown into this rocky journey of darkness and pain against our will. We made the
choice to survive. And we learn how to be bolder and more compassionate. We have new ideals.
Old phrases and
expressions may bother us. Daniel was brain dead when we made the excruciating decision to take him off of the
respirator. So for me to hear a person joke about being "brain dead," due to their slip-up or mistake, doesn't
ever make me smile. I don't even like to use the word "deadline."
Sure, we've been told about the steps or stages of grief — shock and denial and finally, acceptance.
With all due respect to Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, I will never have acceptance of the awful truth of his death.
I do acknowledge his death. He is, after all, obviously, no longer here. But I won't accept it as I would a
birthday gift or an invitation to dinner.
It is a grieving life I've entered. It's a path of rocky trails, heavy with anguish. It's agonizing music that
penetrates every fiber and the loud noise can take years to fade. It is not a path with "closure," another word
that bristles my skin because it implies we will finish being affected by our loved one's death and move off the
grieving path, never to feel sorrow again for the impact their death has made in our daily lives.
Grief is a zigzag of the soul. You never know when tears will be triggered or when a word or memory will take you back, way back, and you are lost in thought for moments. Parents who have buried their children decades ago still feel this zigzag in the depths of their beings.