Important and Helpful Tips For Managing the Holidays For the Bereaved

CornucopiaBy Gloria Lintermans -

While grieving we go through many firsts as important dates come up on the calendar. Whether it’s the first anniversary, birthday or holiday, it’s good to have coping strategies in place to rely on to help us cope.

The holidays can be a particularly difficult time. While we are used to being with our family members during this time, sadly, an important person in the family is missing. And while we take comfort in having family close-whom we depend on for support-often while in their midst we still feel sad or lost remembering past occasions and events because this time of year is particularly ripe with upsetting memories. The following are suggestions for managing the holidays, a difficult time of year for the bereaved.

1. CREATE A NEW HOLIDAY RITUAL – Whatever way you might have set the table before, create a new pattern, maybe different seating arrangements, unusual flowers, something that was not tried before. Asking the guests to bring a small gift for a grab bag. The point is to establish a different ritual, a different style that is not a reminder of the past and not doing things exactly the same way.

2. MAKING PLANS – When the bereaved have too much time on their hands, they begin to think and reflect. Often painful thoughts will come up comprised of past memories and events that were shared with the one they loved. Making plans for the holidays help people cope with change and leave them with some structure and things to do. Too much free time can stimulate loneliness and despair. We are reminded at holiday time by advertising, music, sales and a great deal of visual stimulation so that it appears that everyone in the world is having a good time and a place to go. When plans are made, people often feel that they have something to look forward to and share.

3. LIVING IN THE MOMENT – Worries often increase when people go too far ahead in their thinking. If we learn to breathe and stay in the moment, we learn how to be just in “the now”. In this way, we can fully appreciate the moment that is “Now” and not some other moment to come. We can be fully present and observing just what is in front of us. This may sound simple but people tend to over-analyze and over-think too many things. An example might be that if we look at a flower, really look at it, we begin to notice its color, form, shape, uniqueness, scent, petals and pollen. If we can look at every aspect of that flower as if it were the first time we can truly discover it. There can be great joy in living in the moment and not the past and not the future. It gives us a break from our thoughts and minds and allows us to appreciate the present moment we are in. Often we don’t have to do anything with it but notice it. It is a good break from problem-solving and worry.

4. GRATITUDE – When we are grateful for life’s blessings and for what we have, we distract ourselves from what is wrong with our lives. We fixate and ruminate less on what is missing. Being thankful for our children, our healthy minds and bodies. Being willing to be appreciative all the small things in our lives that make up the big things. Our ability to see, to hear, to think, to reflect, to notice, to enjoy and to feel deeply increases our sensitivity and awareness of the world around us.

5. EXERCISE – Exercise is a good antidote for stress through the holidays and stress at other times as well. Enjoying exercise on a regular basis is something good to include in our lives. Whether we walk, swim, bike ride or hike, moving our bodies allows us to be outdoors and observe nature. It often takes us out of ourselves and into the world. It may distract the griever from the constant state of anxiety which often accompanies early grieving. We release endorphins in our brain when we exercise that give our mood a lift. Exercise is often prescribed for depression and depressive thoughts.

6. NUTRITION – The bereaved often cannot eat, do not enjoy food, or may be inclined to eat too much or eat junk foods. Often the grieving person loses interest in food shopping because they don’t know how to shop for one, or they don’t want to cook for themselves. Appropriate nutritional habits are important through the grieving period because the immune system is down due to stress. Everything one can do to stay healthy is helpful. One of the signs that the bereaved is doing better is the indication that they care again about proper nutrition and make the effort to eat more than cheese and crackers. If a bereaved person was a caregiver and spent a lot of time cooking for an ill spouse they would have to learn to slowly convert this energy and give themselves permission to take good care of themselves. This is appropriate and not an indulgence. It is not selfish; it is good self-nurturing.

7. ADEQUATE REST – Sleep often gets disturbed during times of extreme stress. Being mindful of getting enough sleep is a good idea since sleep patterns can be interrupted. People often report that they may fall asleep but have trouble staying asleep. If one was used to sleeping in a bed with their spouse, there is an increased awareness of the empty bed. People tend to oversleep or not sleep enough during high stress times. Listening to soothing music before bedtime is relaxing; not listening to the news before going to bed is a good idea. It is important to not over stimulate the mind at least an hour before bedtime.

8. FAMILY AND FRIENDS – Reaching out to family and friends is particularly helpful at holiday time. Calling and making arrangements for activities and having plans are useful for getting through the holidays. Friends and family can provide comfort, safely, warmth and love. Surround yourself with the people that bring out the best in you. Talk to your friends and allow them to include you in their plans.

Accept invitations, try to laugh and see funny movies. Be less attached to being a third wheel and more attached to how wonderful it is to have people in your life that care and want to be with you. Initiate a dinner or a movie or some activity to share. Be with friends or family members that help you decrease your stress not increase it and look forward to the fact that next year will be easier for you. It is the first experience of holidays that is the most difficult to get through. Encourage yourself to participate. Hopefully, next year will be easier and you will have more events to look forward to that bring you joy.

Gloria Lintermans and Dr. Marilyn Stolzman are co-authors of THE HEALING POWER OF GRIEF: The Journey Through Loss to Life and Laughter (Sourcebooks, Inc., ISBN 1-932783-48-2) and THE HEALING POWER OF LOVE: Transcending the Loss of a Spouse to New Love (Sourcebooks, Inc., ISBN 1-932783-51-2). Marilyn Stolzman, Ph.D., L.M.F.T, is a highly respected practicing psychotherapist specializing in grief counseling in private practice in Woodland Hills, CA., and the Director of the Los Angeles-based non-profit H.O.P.E. Unit Foundation for Bereavement and Transition, an ongoing bereavement support organization serving the community. Gloria Lintermans is a North Hollywood, Ca.-based freelance writer, author, and widow.

Gloria Lintermans at GloriaLintermans.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Gloria_Lintermans

Comments

4 Responses to “Important and Helpful Tips For Managing the Holidays For the Bereaved”
  1. Marcelle McMillen says:

    I have to point out that for me the second Thanksgiving without my beloved son and my brother has been worse for me than the first one. Perhaps it was because their deaths were only a couple months prior to that holiday or perhaps the distance that their deaths has brought somehow seems more intense, more impenetrable, more final. I hate the holidays – I actually hate every day. I guess I could say that I have become a little less distracted by the grief but it still stays with me and hits without warning – sometimes with an intensity similar to the original event. My entire family is now gone except for my dear elderly and very ill father who is in a personal care home with multiple medical issues and frequent bouts of dementia – the worst being the fact that he has seen my son in his room and insists that he is alive and grills me about his whereabouts to the point that I am going to go mad. I have told him over and over that my son has died and taken him to the grave site, shown him the obituary. He attended the funeral and frequently would tell me to just not think about things when I would start to cry silently. My son was his life and I think that he cannot accept that he is gone.
    So when I read all of these holiday suggestions they never seem to apply to me. I am now totally alone in my house – no need for any celebration. I have a multitude of friends and extended family who do invite me for dinners, etc. I always feel like an outsider no matter what I do. I wish I wasn’t me – I wish I could run away and be someone else for awhile. I hate being this person who has lost everything – I remind people of just how awful life can be. I am a reflection of their fear and often feel like I am contagious. I push myself to go to as many outings as I can but the return to my empty home is so deafeningly quiet. I was once a person who had many people in my life and my house. How can this happen? Will I end up a bag lady?
    I am too old to start another family and can never have another child. That part of my life is gone forever and I don;t know what my purpose here is anymore. Once my father passes I fear I will be hit with a tsunami of grief and abandonment and I don’t know how I will react.
    Right now I am putting one foot in front of the other and getting by. I see no joy on my future. I have moments of laughter as I have always been a humorous person. I have moments of connecting with people, but my enduring connections are for the most part gone and there is nothing tethering me to this life.
    I crave oblivion right now. Calculated oblivion – just some moments of peace. Sleep is a rare commodity for these days so I imagine that oblivion would be almost impossible to find without dangeropus consequences.
    I know that our culture glorifies and worships those who are strong and happy and persevere in the face of every imaginable tragedy. But sometimes you get to a place in life where you can’t be that kind of person.

  2. sandi says:

    I don’t know you, Marcelle, but I think you are worthy of living and that you can find some peace one day. I feel so much for your emptiness and the deafening silence. I am trying to let go of what I want to have (my 3 children) and just be open to experiencing all that is good in my life right now (my 2 surviving children & spouse). I can say that all of these suggestions have been helping me. Thanksgiving was terrible for me, and I didn’t feel I could survive December. But I find I am living in the moment and feeling my son’s presence within me, experiencing for him those things that he would want to do and see, and reaching out to serve others. Oblivion would be so welcome, but it’s not possible without wiping out all of the love you have for those who have been in your life. The only way to survive is to reach outside of yourself and find–create, channel your grief into–new experiences. Maybe dinners or going to gatherings is not your comfort. But you are never a 3rd wheel if you are volunteering. Is there a cause your son would have wanted to support? Can you take up that cause for him? Waiting for oblivion won’t happen. I know. Waiting for peace doesn’t happen either. You have to make it happen even if you don’t want to. No one can give it to you. You have to actively create a purpose, esp if you live alone.

    You are worth it. I’m sure your son would tell you that.

  3. sandi says:

    You may not find oblivion, but I know that the more I can let go of the pain, the more I have been able to remember my son clearly and with serenity, to feel a real sense of his presence in my heart, to dream about him, to remember what it was like to hold him, talk with him, his expressions. It’s the only reason I am surviving. In fact, it is the ONLY reason that I CAN let go of the pain, because I know that the pain is in the way of feeling the peace of his presence. I hope that you can let go of your pain and find some peace.

  4. bankowned says:

    Hopefully a lot of teens will be encouraged to stand up for what they believe in and not just be blind followers.

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