The aftergrief Finding your way along the long arc of loss

Hope Edelman

Book - 2020

"A validating new approach to the long-term grieving process that explains why we feel "stuck," why that's normal, and how shifting a perception of grief can help us grow--from the New York Times bestselling author of Motherless Daughters Shouldn't I be over this by now? Why do I still feel the pain? Because of the common assumption that grief should be time-limited, too many of us believe we've done it "wrong" when sadness reemerges months or even years after a major loss. In The AfterGrief, Hope Edelman offers a new and reality-affirming paradigm: grief is not an emotion to pass through on the way to "feeling better," but a state that we repeatedly return to as we experience important life... transitions and new crises. Drawing from her own encounters with the ripple effects of early loss, as well as interviews with more than seventy-five people, Edelman offers profound advice for reassessing loss and adjusting the stories we tell ourselves about its impact on our identities. With guidance for reframing a story of loss, finding equilibrium within it, and experiencing renewed growth and purpose, The AfterGrief shows that though grief may be a lifelong process, it doesn't have to be a lifelong struggle"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Hope Edelman (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxix, 288 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780399179785
  • Introduction: Getting Over Getting Over It
  • Chapter 1. The Story of Grief
  • Death, Dying, and the Echo That Spanned a Century
  • What We Think about When We Think about Grief
  • Mourning as "Work"
  • We Were Going through a Stage
  • Chapter 2. Getting It Together
  • The Social Rules of Bereavement
  • Saying Hullo Again
  • The Children Who Led the Way
  • Re-Membering the Departed
  • Chapter 3. Something New
  • New Grief: Here and Now
  • A Model for Everyone
  • What More Is New Grief?
  • The Childhood Exception, Part 1: Staggered Grief
  • Chapter 4. Old Grief: Recurrent and Resurgent
  • Cyclical Grief
  • Sneak Attacks
  • Resurrected Grief
  • The Childhood Exception, Part 2: Developmental Grief
  • Chapter 5. New Old Grief: One-Time Transitions
  • Life Transitions: Maturational Grief
  • Proxy Grief
  • Age-Correspondence Events
  • Next- Gen, Next-Level
  • Chapter 6. The Rings of Grief
  • Model Behavior
  • The Rings of Grief
  • Chapter 7. The Power of Story
  • A Story Takes Shape
  • Testing and Telling
  • Chapter 8. People, We Need to Talk (and Write, and Paint, and Perform)
  • The Cost of Silence
  • The Good Kind of "Letting Go"
  • Chapter 9. Six Exceptions in Search of a Narrative
  • Stories of Sudden Death: Narratives Compressed
  • Too Young to Remember
  • Too Young to Understand
  • Stories of Silence, Secrets and Lies
  • Stories with Missing Pieces
  • Traumatic Loss
  • Chapter 10. Reauthoring Your Story of Loss
  • Snapshots in Time
  • Stories in Motion
  • The Story of Now
  • Stories of Loss Are Also Stories of Lives
  • Chapter 11. Story Cracking: Getting from A to Z
  • Issues of Identity
  • The Alphabet of Overlooked Events
  • The Role of the Surviving Parent
  • Dominos and ACEs
  • Let's Get Back to Christopher
  • Chapter 12. Story Mending: Finding Continuity
  • Two Kinds of Life Stories
  • Two Things Can Be True
  • The Continuous You: An Experiential Exercise
  • Epilogue: The Missing Elements of Grief
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

There isn't a right or wrong way to grieve, according to Edelman. Nor does grieving fit neatly into Kübler-Ross' accepted five stages. Instead, grief follows a winding path, moving in and out of lives, often unexpectedly. Even years after a death, celebrating a graduation, a wedding, or the birth of a child can rekindle buried if never forgotten grief. Edelman, the author of eight books, including the classic Motherless Daughters (1994), was a teen when her own mother died, and for this book she has interviewed numerous men and women who lost a parent or parents while they were young. In their stories, emotional survival seems to hinge on being able to talk about their loss with a receptive adult and openly grieve. Edelman is grateful that the old "don't dwell on it" advice seems to be disappearing and urges readers to understand that there are no timetable for loss and no firm rules. Death is part of everyone's life. Community helps us cope, and Edelman's knowledgeable and thoughtful book offers a gentle, compassionate guide to grieving.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

How the impact of human loss transcends the lives of the bereaved. As she did in the bestselling Motherless Daughters (1994), which examined the emotional challenges of women who grew up without a maternal figure, Edelman dissects the dynamics of grief. "I wish there were a foolproof method for 'getting over' the death of someone we love," she writes in the lucid preamble. However, "everything I've experi-enced, learned, and observed over the past thirty-eight years has taught me otherwise." Drawing on her in-depth interviews with 81 individuals, the author looks at how the grieving process shaped her subjects' lives and could potentially impact their futures as well. Edelman's personal journey, though repetitive, is also noteworthy: Her mother died of breast cancer in 1981 at age 42, and she discusses the ever evolving meaning of her death, particularly once she became a parent and "really understood how foreshortened my mother's life had been and what she'd missed out on by dying so young." The author also explores grief from a historical perspective through eras devastated by war and disease, and she taps into psychological, societal, and gender-specific patterns of mourning, referencing research studies on such concepts as "the rings of grief." Sensitive readers should brace for the heartbreaking profiles of people whose lives never fully rebounded from the catastrophic loss of a loved one, whether the death was sudden, protracted, or shrouded in mystery. These varied perspectives coalesce to show how grief endures longer than most people ever realize. Edelman emphasizes that while we may never truly outlive the fallout from loss, it becomes an element of life that can be integrated into our own unique versions of felicity. "Unexpressed grief from the past may be one of the most overlooked public health crises of our time," writes the author, who proactively seeks to change cultural perceptions about the way it is viewed, with an eye toward improved support networks for post-traumatic growth. A timelessly relevant chronicle on enduring grief. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Getting Over Getting Over It A medium once told my sister that our mother was living in a corner of her kitchen. Being our mother's daughters, we took this news in stride. She'd raised us to be open-minded and humble. Who were we to believe we knew better than anyone else? Also, our mother in a kitchen made good sense. Hers had been the nucleus of our childhood home, the place where she'd spent much of her time: standing at the kitchen island, prepping chicken cacciatore in her Crock-Pot, drinking Maxwell House coffee at the speckled Formica table with neighborhood friends, sitting at the corner desk and winding the avocado-green phone cord around and around her index finger as she settled into a leisurely call. With three children and a husband for whom tidiness was forever an abstraction, she was always struggling to keep the space clean. My mother would have loved my sister's kitchen. Mine surrendered to chronic disorder long ago, but my sister's kitchen is always shiny and pristine. I'd choose to hang out there, too. My sister and I live across the country from our family's burial plots and rarely get to visit the graves. So she placed a framed black-and-white photograph of our mother in the corner of her kitchen between a neat row of mason jars and the countertop range. When I dog-sit for her boxers I give them treats from a jar and we say hello to my mom. I might let her know that her children and grandchildren are doing fine. If I'm facing a big decision, I'll brush my fingertips across the glass and silently ask her for advice. I have to imagine how she'd answer. We had only seventeen years together, and I was pretty much tuning her out for the final two. I've long since forgotten the sound of her voice and the timbre of her laugh. She died in 1981, and we never made tapes of her talking. In my dreams she speaks in an unfamiliar pitch, her words sometimes garbled, sometimes clear. I haven't heard her real voice in almost thirty-nine years. Thirty-nine years. I know. That's a long time. Says pretty much everyone, ever. Thirty-nine years and you're not over it yet? Anyone with major loss in the past knows this question well. We've spent years fielding versions of it, explicit and implied, from parents, siblings, spouses, partners, relatives, colleagues, acquaintances, and friends. We recognize the subtle cues--the slight eyebrow lift, the soft, startled "Oh! That long ago?"--from those who wonder how an event so distant can still occupy such precious mental and emotional real estate. Why certain, specific nodes are still so tender when poked. How many of us have wondered the same? You're still not over it yet? As if the death of a loved one were a hurdle in a track meet that could be cleared and left behind. I wish there were a foolproof method for "getting over" the death of someone we love. So much, I do. Except everything I've experienced, learned, and observed over the past thirty-eight years has taught me otherwise. Since the publication of my first book, Motherless Daughters, in 1994, I've collected stories from thousands of women in the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Europe, India, and the Middle East whose mothers died when they were young. I've spoken to, emailed, and met with their brothers, husbands, fathers, daughters, and sons. Five file cabinets in my office are filled to capacity with research into how the human body, intellect, and spirit respond to major loss. In nonfiction writing classrooms for the past twenty years, I've helped graduate students and aspiring writers identify, question, and articulate their stories of trauma and loss. And for this book, I conducted in-depth interviews with eighty-one men and women who had experienced the deaths of significant loved ones in the past--most of whom were children, adolescents, or young adults at the time, and whose bereavement needs were frequently mismanaged or misunderstood. Taken together, that adds up to a staggering number of losses. Which is how I can report with assurance that the death of a loved one, especially for someone at a tender age, isn't something most of us get over, get past, put down, or move beyond. That's a myth of diminishment. Instead, a major loss gets folded into our developing identities, where it informs our thoughts, hopes, expectations, behaviors, and fears. We carry it forward into all that follows. "It's phenomenal, how it never really goes away," says author and therapist Claire Bidwell Smith. "It changes shape and form all the time and comes back in different ways, even when you think it's gone. I'm twenty-four years out from the death of my mother and seventeen years from the death of my father and those losses have been with me, in some fashion, every day since they died." When psychologist Leeat Granek and author Meghan O'Rourke surveyed nearly eight thousand adults who'd lost a close loved one for Slate magazine in 2011, they observed--in their words--that "the alterations of loss are subtly stitched throughout one's ongoing life." Nearly one-third of their survey participants had experienced the death of a close loved one eight or more years earlier. Instead of feeling "over it," they wanted to keep talking about how grief had shaped their present-day experiences and how it might continue to affect their imagined futures. "This process is a longer one than most people realize," explains psychologist Robert Neimeyer, a professor of constructivist psychology at the University of Memphis and the founder of the Portland Institute for Loss and Transition, "unfolding over years rather than months, and involving periodic 'grief spikes' years or even decades later." The Slate survey found the same. One-quarter of the respondents said they'd felt normal only one to two years after the loss. More than one-quarter said they'd never gone back to feeling like themselves afterward. Nonetheless, when random cross sections of Americans have been asked how long grief should last after a significant loss, their answers range from several days up to a year. The majority of respondents in one study placed the outer limit at two weeks. Two weeks. In some cultures that's barely enough time to hold a funeral, let alone put emotional pain into any perspective and start making sense of the loss. A terrible disconnect exists between what the average person thinks grief should look and feel like--typically, a series of progressive, time-limited stages that end in a state of "closure"--and how grief, that artful dodger, actually behaves. This means a whole lot of people getting stuck in the gap between what they've been told to expect after someone dies and what they actually encounter when it happens. Excerpted from The AfterGrief: Finding Your Way along the Long Arc of Loss by Hope Edelman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.