“Each loss brings growth with it, and learning to handle new experiences and taking charge of your needs is part of the transformative process.”
Elizabeth Berrien“It is important to recognize when you have been detached from life for too long. The fact is you are still alive, and I can only imagine that your loved one would want you to go on living. I highly doubt they would have said to you, "When or if I die before you, I want you to spend the rest of your life sitting on a couch staring at the wall. Please fulfill this important task for me.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“Journeying through grief is one of the most "normal human" experiences you can have. Nevertheless, all too frequently the heartbroken seem to feel alienated by society. Unfortunately in our culture, we are taught to hold our feelings in. If someone asks us, "How are you doing today?" the expected answer is, "I'm okay." But what if you aren't okay? You obviously don't want to go into a monologue of why you're not okay, but sometimes you feel as if you're going to explode if you can't "tell off" that well-meaning person for even daring to ask you such a thing in the first place!”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“Learning to live again wholeheartedly includes letting love flow freely in and out of your heart.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“Everything assumes a different intensity when you are feeling the pain of loss. Be prepared. A minor annoyance that you might once have managed with a shrug now becomes a nuclear crisis! You are no doubt going to do things perfectly imperfectly. That is part of our path as humans. Forget about striving for perfection while dealing with grief! If you beat yourself up every time you forget something, have a breakdown, or don't do something correctly then you're going to end up very black and blue. I guarantee you won't want to look in the mirror! So be kinder and more patient with yourself.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“Mothering while grieving should involve being understanding and keeping a gentle attitude toward yourself as you work to balance your own needs and your child's. You become stronger by remaining aware of your own well-being, which in turn makes you a stronger person for your child or children.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“Some of the choices you make might not always turn out to be the best ones, but at least you are learning as you go.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“Remember to view yourself and your humanness with a kind heart.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“I began to feel that nature itself was nurturing me, reminding me that life still offered beauty and calm, and that I was also made out of these elements.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“You have to do what feels right for you. Do not let anyone influence you otherwise. It is your mind, your heart, and your own internal wisdom that will lead you in the direction you need to go.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope“I used to feel afraid of the future, always assuming the worst. But now I've realized that my worst fears have already happened, and I've survived them! I've walked into the fire and made it out alive. Only the loss of a close loved one could have "woken me up" to reality in the same way.”
Elizabeth Berrien, Creative Grieving: A Hip Chick's Path from Loss to Hope