Sounds like you also might need to tell more of you story -- esp the passing away of you Dad and express all the feelings you still haven't gotten to.
I get that it is overwhelming right now. That's why you ask for the therapist to help you make the strategy. Then you just do what you can, rest, and then show up again for a little bit more. Intertwined or not... one can only deal with so much in one go any way. Baby steps. It's ok.
My father does that. He WANTS to be there for people but it wigs him out. Any mention if it at all and he wants to run for the hills. He doesn't want to see other people mourning, even though he knows it is natural. He doesn't want to deal with arrangements, even though he knows we cannot leave the deceased unattended. He doesn't want to go to funerals, because they are "too sad." He simply has not made peace with the fact that death is a part of life, and he spends a lot of energy avoiding making that peace.
As part of the process of letting it all go, is she willing to do that?
Galagirl
Making a checklist sounds good, but to me, everything seems to intertwine, so it becomes difficult to see where one part ends, and the other begins.
I get that it is overwhelming right now. That's why you ask for the therapist to help you make the strategy. Then you just do what you can, rest, and then show up again for a little bit more. Intertwined or not... one can only deal with so much in one go any way. Baby steps. It's ok.
She acknowledged how much I was there for her, and promised to be there just as much for me, yet, when the time came, it was as though she fled the country.
My father does that. He WANTS to be there for people but it wigs him out. Any mention if it at all and he wants to run for the hills. He doesn't want to see other people mourning, even though he knows it is natural. He doesn't want to deal with arrangements, even though he knows we cannot leave the deceased unattended. He doesn't want to go to funerals, because they are "too sad." He simply has not made peace with the fact that death is a part of life, and he spends a lot of energy avoiding making that peace.
I think that more than anything, it would be nice if my feelings about the whole thing were acknowledged.
As part of the process of letting it all go, is she willing to do that?
Galagirl
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