ANGRY AND GRATEFUL AT THE SAME TIME?

Just try to be angry and grateful at the same time. Hard, isn’t it?

It is difficult because the focus on one interferes with your ability to do the other.  

Once we get past the numbness after our wife passes, we usually sink into a period of deep grieving that may last months or even years. During the early part of this process, we can become obsessed with everything we are angry about to the point that we can think of little else.

This may be anger at God, the doctors, the clergy, friends, family, neighbors, the insurance company, the hospital, and even at ourselves and our wives. This can be expressed in questions, like:

·        How could she leave me like this?

·        Why didn’t God save her and take me first?

·        Why couldn’t the doctors, hospital, clergy, and others save her?

·        How could everyone be so insensitive?

·        Why is it so hard to settle things with the bank, insurance company, state, etc.? All this damned paperwork is overwhelming.

·        Everyone is deserting me, and I have nowhere to turn.

When we are immersed in this anger, it is hard to see anything else! If we remain in this painful place, it is extremely hard to heal and climb out of this despair. Eventually, you will realize that no amount of anger is going to solve anything, much less help you to move forward again. It becomes a huge weight dragging you down and driving everyone you care for away from you. It colors your thinking and perpetuates itself by telling you that all this anger is justified.

A widow I was dating after my wife’s passing was immersed in anger over the failure of the hospital to properly treat her husband before he died. She had researched the care (or lack of care) he had received and felt strongly that she should pursue legal alternatives. This was holding her back from healing. Eventually, she learned to let it go and was able to move forward with her healing and life.

Some anger is inevitable. But, to recognize it for what it is allows us to put it behind us after we have vented and gotten it out of our system. This is not to say that there will not be times when your anger is justified and even needed in order to confront some challenges; but, it is to say that we need to recognize it for what it is and to purposefully limit and control it… rather than letting it control you.

The best solution I have found is to focus on expressing gratitude instead of anger. If you want to remember, honor, and love your wife, “Gratitude” with a capital “G” is the best way to accomplish this.

Gratitude for the:

·        great life you built together,

·        love and support she expressed for you,

·        fun things you got to do together,

·        your family and friends that you built together, and

·        many memories and experiences you want to hold onto.

As you begin to focus on this gratitude, learn to make this the first thing you do when you wake up every morning and start your day. My trick was to write down the many things I was grateful for from my wife, my family, those supporting me, my community, and more. I put this list above the toilet, so it was the first thing I saw every morning when I got up. This helped me to get my head in the right place at the beginning of every day. You might try some version of this that works for you.

Good luck my friends.

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