It is a complicated grief.

Grief hurts.

It surprises even years after the loss.

You might think you have “dealt with that” only to discover feelings ambush you at some surprise moment.

Our culture does not do grief well.

Churches can be especially bad on this number. This is particularly true as it comes to the grief associated with a divorce.

Sometimes people confuse the grief anger for lack of forgiveness or bitterness.

They know what to tell a fellow Christian about “bitterness.” However, they are scared when it is raw pain they are encountering.

We do not heal from losses on a timeline.

It is an emotional process. Losses remain losses. The piece is gone. That hole will remain. We lost part of ourselves with the end of the marriage as dividing what was one is never neat.

For me, I have the hardest time with the positive memories from my first marriage. They trigger sadness for me over what might have been if only my first wife had chosen righteousness over sin.

I don’t know about you…

Whatever it might be, I encourage you to be kind to yourself. You ARE entitled to grief in your own unique way and take as much time as you need. 

You are NOT defective or bitter to have feelings years later because you feel sad over what you lost. It just means you cared. That is a good thing.

 

 

 

 

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3 thoughts on “It is a complicated grief.”

  1. I just want to pain to stop. The darkness.to.go.away. sounds like it will always be there until I die.

    1. Eric,
      Chumplady’s response to a grieving chump today does a nice job addressing this. Also, Psalm 23 may give you some strength as you walk THROUGH this path.

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