IceMobster wrote:The first thing that popped into my mind after reading this is the question: isn't that selfish?
Of course not. The basic reason we weep and grieve when we lose someone we love is
because we love them. The only way to take away the pain of loss is to take away love for the person lost.
That would be the truly selfish thing.
Please, y'all stop being so "spiritual" in all this. Grief is a human emotion. Grant the best of intentions in your comments (speaking to those of you who are suggesting that you don't grieve or that grief is inappropriate), look at the message you are sending to others. You take someone who
is grieving the loss of spouse or child or friend or whatever, and you are calling them
selfish?!?
When I first started my clinical training, I was told that my first responsibility was to do no harm. I wish ministers would take that advice to heart. I can't tell you how many messes I have to clean up after some well intentioned preacher comes in and tells a family not to be selfish or that God must have had a reason to take them or that everything happens for a reason or that God won't give you more than you can handle or whatever other
stupid and hurtful cliche you can think of. These poor souls are being tortured by their own spirituality, and their preachers are the ones holding the pitchforks. It's unintentional, of course. More, the preachers (and Christian friends) are trying to be helpful. But they don't know what to say, so rather than just grieving WITH the hurting person (which is what Jesus did at Lazarus' tomb, by the way), they start trying to fix it. They start telling them reasons why they ought not feel that way. And then, on top of grief, the person starts feeling guilty for feeling sad . . . for feeling an emotion God gave them!
I'm not denying that there is peace in the midst of Christian grief. We can rejoice (truly) in knowing that our loved one is in glory, that they are at perfect peace and no longer hurting, in knowing that this is only a temporary see-you-later and not a permanent goodbye. We can look forward to seeing them again and sing "When We All Get to Heaven" with passion. But don't say therefore that grief and sadness are out of place or wrong. Remember that death is an
enemy. Christ had to
defeat it. When our loved one dies, we feel
lonely, and that's the first thing that God said is not good. It's not selfish, then, to be sad in the face of death. It is profoundly human. Once again, Jesus felt sadness and grief. It's just that we can have hope that our grief is not forever, and that is something to thank God for.
So, please, for the love of all that is good, stop with the "there's no reason to be sad" talk. That kind of talk causes real emotional harm to people.