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Grieving for My Sisters
by Christine Lang
In the last seven years I have lost my sister Janice, my
sister Norma, and just recently my 86-year-old mother. Now, there is just my
beloved father and me. When he dies, I will have lost my entire immediate
family, the common memory of our lives together. The grief of these losses has
moved through me as the ocean itself, sometimes with waves so turbulent and with
such force that I did not think I would be sustained. Other times, gentle tears
fell washing ashore in forgotten moments brought to mind through a song or a
photo, a piece of jewelry or a holiday.
Yet I was sustained. The power and process of the
Progoff Intensive Journal Method and the writing retreats brought a
sanctuary for my heart and soul. On the pristine white pages and through the
rhythmic flow of the Intensive Journal process itself I have poured out
my sorrow and confusion and anger and questions. I have gained entry to locked
rooms of feelings and unfinished conversations, been able to rest in the
emptiness that can’t be filled except by acceptance and mourning. The
Intensive Journal Method has been a friend, a refuge, a treasure, and a
lover offering a compassionate, non-judgmental ear to hear all the voices
needing to speak.
When grief took up residence in my life, each experience was
as different as the relationships and the circumstances of each death brought
its own tidal wave of responses. When Janice died, it was tangled up in
witnessing unimaginable suffering so much so that I used to steel myself
everyday just to enter the hospital. I felt overwhelmed by my helplessness and
sense of powerlessness to ease her pain. As I write this I can still remember
the agony in her voice and her desperation to have life end. Pulled apart by
those feelings of wanting it to end for her and railing against her dying at 47
I muddled through that week as best I could. I took solace in knowing I had been
there with her. Yet grief demands more than a week, after all the relationship
had lasted a lifetime. We had shared a room growing up and all of the secrets
and stories that came to inhabit that space between us.
It was at the Intensive Journal Workshops that I found
a new room, one filled with the sacred space and community of the facilitator
and the other participants. All of us gathered together in the silence, in the
silence that welcomed me gently and gracefully. In the days that took me through
the workshops of Life Context, Depth Contact, and Life Integration, I began to
experience the blessings of the process, the magic of how each section can
reveal mysteries buried in my own heart and mind while at the same time drawing
me ever inward to greater depths and understanding. It was at one of these
workshops that I had a dialogue with the event of Janice’s death. I asked
it directly why it was so merciless, why now, why this way. The power of that
conversation, the opportunity to be honest and heard, was healing. At one point
in the dialogue, Death surprised me with its keen awareness and compassion
saying, "I’m sorry you had to witness her suffering so much—it was the price you
paid for loving her so much and not abandoning her in the end. I know it took
everything you had to walk in each day." I did not expect this and I felt my
body and heart shift to a different place, one of recognition that Janice’s
death was not my personal enemy. Janice’s death came as a result of a
complicated set of circumstances and personal choices and medical decisions over
which I simply had no control. But I did gain the clarity and affirmation that I
took the journey with her as best I could, as far as I could go.
At another retreat I began to surrender the torrent of
complicated feelings surrounding the death of my sister Norma who was murdered
on September 11. Even now there is a surreal quality about writing those words.
She literally vanished from life, her body disappearing into the rubble of the
Pentagon. The plane that was to take her to the Far East to see my niece and
brother-in-law, instead took her to her death. So this time I wasn’t there,
wasn’t agonizing over the suffering and what it would be like afterwards. This
time it came out of the blue, a mind boggling, heretofore-unknown reality. There
was no preparation, no warning, no getting ready.
This time there was also unfinished business, unspoken
questions, lingering wounds and time was up, just like that. This was just after
a summer at the beach together that held out the promise of a new relationship
and a future of possibility. The Intensive Journal process invited it all
in without censorship or criticism: a space to look at it, feel it, move with
it, sometimes with grace and sometimes awkwardly, sometimes with hope and
sometimes with despair. There was the community of people who bore it all with
me by being in the silence, writing their own stories. Perhaps it is hard to
imagine this intimacy in so much quiet, yet it is the very silence that permits
us each to hear our own voices, voices able to speak in a space that honors the
honesty of whatever must be heard.
In the aftermath of both these deaths I used the Intensive
Journal Method again to gain some perspective while writing in the Period Log:
It is a time when my family has shifted like the plates
of the earth, feelings of eruption and dislocation, tears in the fabric of
the family system and the upheaval of roles and rules, communications and
connections. It is a time of facing the accelerated mental and physical
deterioration of my mother softened by the reconciliation of my
relationship with my father and the advancement of an understanding that I
never thought possible. It is a time of noticing the aging process and not
really liking it or wanting to give it a rousing welcome, a kind of "not
now for God’s sake, I’m not in the mood". It is a time of faithfulness and
the commitment to give voice to my life in all its disparate elements.
Unlike any other relationship, the Intensive Journal
Method is always available, always ready to listen, always receiving and giving.
The very structure and dynamic of its parts leads me somehow to gain a sense of
greater wholeness. Not in one moment or two, but over time the journal, along
with the retreats, has given my grief a home, a hideout, and hospitality. By
honoring its presence in me, I am being transformed and able to wonder and
imagine what might now emerge. To pick up the pieces is never easy or simple. It
never goes back to the way it was; the loss is forever. But to walk this
landscape with the support of the Intensive Journal process and other
companions has offered immeasurable relief and hope.
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"Intensive Journal" is a registered trademark of Ira Progoff and
licensed to Dialogue House. © Copyright 2006. Reprinted with permission
of the author.
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