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Certified Grief Recovery® Specialist, Relationship Expert, April
Braswell,with Russell Friedman, co-founder of The Grief Recovery
Institute.
We have all been educated on how to acquire things. We have been taught how to get an education,
get a job, buy a house, etc. There are colleges, universities, trade schools, and technical schools. You
can take courses in virtually anything that might interest you.
What education do we receive about dealing with loss? What school do you go to
learn to deal with the conflicting feelings caused by significant emotional loss? Loss is so much more
predictable and inevitable than gain, and yet we are woefully ill-prepared to deal with loss.
One of the most damaging killer clichés about loss is "time heals all wounds."
When we present open lectures on the subject of Grief Recovery®, we often ask if anyone is still feeling
pain, isolation, or loneliness as the result of the death of a loved one 20 or more years ago. There are
always several hands raised in response to that question. Then we gently ask, "if time is going to heal,
then 20 years still isn't enough?"
While recovery from loss does take some time, it need not take as much time as you have been led
to believe. Recovery is totally individual, there is no absolute time frame. Sometimes in an
attempt to conform to other people's time frames, we do ourselves great harm. This idea leads us to another
of the killer clichés, "you should be over it by now."
It is bad enough that well-meaning, well intentioned friends attack us with killer clichés,
but then we start picking on ourselves. We start believing that we are defective or somehow deficient
because we haven't recovered yet.
If we take just the two killer clichés we've mentioned so far, we can see that they have
something in common. They both imply that a non-action will have some therapeutic or recovery value.
That by waiting, and letting some time pass, we will heal. Let's add a third cliché to the batch,
"you have to keep busy." Many grievers follow this incorrect advice and work two or three
jobs. They fill their time with endless tasks and chores. At the end of any given day, asked how they feel,
invariably they report that their heart still feels broken; that all they accomplished by staying
busy was to get exhausted.
Now, with only three basic killer clichés we can severely limit and restrict our ability to
participate in effective recovery. It is not only that people around us tell us these clichés, in an
attempt to help, but we ourselves learned and practiced these false beliefs for most of our lives. It is
time for us to learn some new and helpful beliefs to assist us in grieving and completing relationships
that have ended or changed.
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