A Grief Support Blog

This blog will allow you the opportunity to acquire both support and guidance after experiencing a significant loss.

On Crying and Grief - Part 1

Almost everyone has some questions and confusion about crying and grief. How much crying is enough? If I start crying, will I be able to stop? Do I have to cry at all? I've cried and cried but I still don't feel better, is there something wrong with me? Are men and women different when it comes to crying? We will address these and other questions in this two part series on crying. We had intended this to be a single article, but as it unfolded we realized that it needed more than a little space to do it justice. Do not be alarmed if you recognize yourself in some of the scenarios highlighted here.

A common call to the Grief Recovery Institute starts like this: "My Mom died several months ago, and I'm very worried about my Dad." This statement is made by a young man or woman who is concerned about the well being of their father. In the ensuing conversation, we determine that although the caller believes that Dad is devastated by the death of his spouse, Dad has not cried "yet." We have put the word yet in quotes to illustrate the son or daughter's obvious belief that in order to grieve you must cry. [The fact is that the son or daughter has not seen him cry. That does not mean that Dad has not cried in private, and has not or will not talk about it]. The well-meaning offspring is concerned, because they believe that there is an absolute and direct correlation between grief and crying. When asked if they think that Dad's heart is broken, they always respond that they are sure that it is. We ask them, "where is it written that you must cry when you are sad?" We do not ask that question to be mean spirited, merely to illustrate that the caller may be laboring under a terrible mis-apprehension that tears must accompany sad feelings.

Let us pose a couple of other questions here, as we do in person or on the telephone. Have you ever known anyone who cries all the time, but never seems to change or grow? Have you ever known anyone who uses crying as a manipulation to get something? There is a high probability that you will answer yes to both questions. Both of those questions are designed to explain the fact that crying, in and of itself, does not necessarily lead to completion of the pain caused by death, divorce, or any other losses. At best, crying acts as a short term energy relieving action, and relieves, temporarily, some of the emotional energy generated by the loss. We know of people who have been crying over the same loss, daily, for years and years. We know that the crying has not helped them complete what is emotionally incomplete in their relationship with their loved who died, or the person from whom they are divorced.

As our society has evolved, we have seen a quantum shift in the public display of emotion. In today's world, it is not at all unlikely to see a retiring professional athlete, often the paragon of masculinity, weeping openly in a televised press conference. It is hard to imagine that same scenario occurring thirty or forty years ago. If your male parent is 70 years old or older, he is more likely to be affected by different beliefs about the open display of emotions than you are. Even your female parent is liable to be less willing to communicate sad, painful, or negative emotions than you. You must fight the trap of applying your emotional value system to others. It may seem odd, since your parents taught you, that you have different emotional views than they do.

In part 2 we will address issues of gender and the underlying keys to recovery based on the uniqueness of each individual relationship.

Question:

If I start crying will I be able to stop?

Answer:

In our more than twenty years of helping grieving people, we have never seen anyone who has been unable to stop crying.

Comments

Is their heart still broken if they never cried, never talked about it and married a new woman 2 years later?

That's what my dad did after my mom died, and my sister stopped talking to him and won't even visit him anymore, just because she thinks everyone has to have the same reaction about our mom that SHE did. But, when our mom was alive all my sister and she ever did was ARGUE and FIGHT about everything.

So I'm quite confused about how she could be so ragingly angry at my mom one minute then dissolve every last bit of that rage and suddenly enshrine our mom's person into something the woman never was. Even if there's a good reason for why she's doing it, that doesn't explain why she thinks never talking to him again is going to force him into leaving this NEW woman.

He's going to stay with the new woman, and her leaving him high and dry - which also means he doesn't get to see his grandsons - isn't going to do ANYthing to change it.

All it's going to do is put those two boys in the middle of something ELSE. They've been in the middle of EVERYthing that occurs between their mom and dad, and she wants to put them in the middle of this too?

It doesn't make sense to me, and I'm having a hard time feeling pity for her when she's putting two teenage boys through it too.

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