Lessons in Grieving
Using Your Support System
Your family and friends will help you through the grieving process. You might find it helpful to have a trusted family member or friend determine all of the things that need to be done—both the routine tasks and the specifics for the coming days and weeks.
These people are also great listeners. Talking with them about the death of a loved one helps you confront your grief and relive fond memories. Michele Wojciechowski, who lost her mother after a long battle with cancer, remembers talking about her mother with her friends, her husband and “anyone who would listen,” she says. “Friends and family talked to me a lot and, more importantly, let me talk.”
Though your support system will get you through this tough time, they will have to return to their own lives. Finding a grieving support group can also help, but make sure you are the right fit for the group.
Lisa decided to enter a support group through her church, but she felt uncomfortable. “One of the women actually said, ‘Well, Lisa’s young enough, she’ll find someone else.’ They really didn’t understand my circumstances,” she recalls.
She then found an online support group of women who were grieving the death of a loved one. “In the first few months, that was really a lifesaver,” she says. “I could talk online with people who understood what I was going through, even in the middle of the night when I couldn’t sleep.”
Taking Care of Yourself
Though you may feel consumed by grieving, it’s truly important to take care of your own health and well-being during this time. Bissler maintains that the first step to taking care of yourself is listening to your own body, which means doing things at your own pace. “Selfishness is required,” Bissler explains. “People must treat themselves as if they were healing from major surgery.”
Believe it or not, eating well and exercising are imperative to your overall health and ability to get through the grieving process. Taking care of yourself goes beyond the physical: Self-care on an emotional level begins with overcoming fears, such as financial fears, loneliness, the pain or length of the grieving process and the perceived inability to achieve a sense of normalcy.
Conquering these fears begins with knowing that you can survive, explains Ellen Sue Stern, author of Living with Loss: Meditations for Grieving Widows. “If we have risen to the occasion in other challenging situations—knowing that we’re strong, resilient, capable of getting through tough times—we can draw on these qualities.”





Dear Leprechauns32,
Your post was the very first one I read after visiting this website for the very first time.
I think it was a real act of the universe that this was so, as I lost my Beloved Mum to ovarian cancer almost a year ago.
The pain never really goes away, but somehow the coping mechanisms do get better. I even feel better sharing my support with you. It doesn't stop me from random bursts of tears, but I like knowing that we are not alone in this.
God bless you and your family and know that I am thinking of you and sending you Aloha!!!
Im so glad I found this website. I have been having a really hard time im 30 years old. and just lost my mom who was 59 to ovarian cancer. I took care of her up until she passed on december 27 2008. I miss her so much i cant believe she is go ne. This is unbelieably painful and Im having a real hard time with it. its been 5 months now and it feels like yesterday.
your article was very touching Ive never had someone die in my life and she was the closest person to me
Dear Christyb62: There is no excuse for your husband's company not coming to your home or notifying you of his awful and untimely death. I am so sorry that you had to experience this event in such a cold hearted way. I would seek out an attorney at once as he suffered death at his place of employment. Death is never easy to experience, I have lost my mother to suicide, father to a heart attack at 81, my dog yesterday....Are there friends or relatives who can come and stay with you at this difficult time or caring neighbor to whom you can speak. I know that you probably feel like covering your head in your pillow and never live again.....Pray my dear. Ask God or your higher power to give you the strength to continue on. Use this website to pour out your heart on paper. There are many people in this world who have gone thru many heartbreaking experiences and who will help you along your journey. One step at a time, one minute at a time. I know right now you are devastated. Cry, let the tears flow. Just don't let anyone tell you to move on. Take the time YOU need to grieve. Set a realistic timetable for yourself to move on. Seek professional assistance if you think you need it, but take one day at a time. Make a space in your environment, whereever that is to devote to your husband. Maybe place a flower on a table, next to a picture, spray his favorite cologne on your pillow so you can smell him or sleep on one of his shirts. It may seem silly, but just smelling his smell will help you to cope. Do what you both loved. Take a walk, play music, meditate. And then when you are ready rejoin life. You have friends here who will help you thru this difficult time. I will pray for your healing dear. You are not alone.
My husband died on our wedding Anniversary in an industrial accident at work. It happened at 1:45pm No one c called me or came to our house! Yet when they wanted him to work over time on the week ends they ALWAYS called. I worked graveyard I had gotten up (he usually woke me at 4pm so we'd have sometime together). I turned on the 5pm news and there he was, covered up with a sheet. I'am so bitter because of the way I found out and because it was thier fault!! I NEED HELP PLEASE.
I can not keep from isolating. Any sugguestions there?