Friday, June 4, 2021


My brother is coming out to visit this month.  I haven't seen him in almost eight years.  I was mad for a long time after mum died.  I'm letting go of that now.  Everybody deals with grief differently and I get angry.  From the amount of anger I've felt during my lifetime, it would appear I have had a lot of grief.  But I'm not special, everybody has grief in their lives, everybody has had bad things happen in their lives and I wonder though why my main go to is anger.

When I was not quite three my mum said she wanted to leave, which I still remember.  I remember feeling shock, or the shock that a three year old can feel.  Is that when I stopped trusting the world?  Or was it my dad and his deep distrust of the world, fueled by his alcoholic mother and a world war in which he lost any innocence that he still had when he signed up?  I don't know.

Was it watching my parents trying to deal with their own grief?  My sister was in a horrific accident when she was twelve years old, something barely mentioned in my family growing up.  I was born four years after that accident.  My parents lost five babies between me and my sisters, again something only mentioned in passing by my mother.  My father lost his best friend in the war.  My mother left all of her family behind when she joined my father in Canada after the war.  My grandparents divorced after the war.  My mum didn't see her mother for years after the war.  My father lost both his parents before I was born.  He lost his mum earlier than that to alcohol.  So much grief to carry around.

I look at my own failed marriage which I knew was a failure when I had only been married two years but I stayed for my kids.  I look at the worst grief I've ever experienced, which was Katie's diagnosis.  That grief dragged me past anger, down into a despair that took years to recover from.  So much grief but how did I settle on anger as my response to this grief?

Anger is big and anger feels like control.  Anger also doesn't leave me feeling vulnerable.  My need to control, my anger, they make me feel safe.  I hate feeling vulnerable, even with the man I love.  Somehow I got it into my head that I feel safe when I am in control, which of course is bullshit.  I think my dad felt the same too.  I think he was so afraid of the world that he got angry and stayed angry.  

Of course when you get angry and stay angry you have to push people away, even the people you love.  You build a wall around your heart, certain that this will protect you but all it does is keep everyone out.  You're not safe, you're just alone.  

I wonder how much of my depression is just grief.  Is it where I got stuck?  My husband talks about ruts in our brains, how we get stuck in them, these neural pathways so used to anger and sadness, how hard it is to get out of those ruts.  And how do I get out of depression and move onto acceptance and hope?  

Work I'm guessing, lots and lots of hard work.  No wonder people drink, it sounds much easier than hard work.  It never ends it seems, this ongoing process of becoming, but it is something I want.  Although I always quit whatever it is I'm doing to feel better before I feel better permanently.  Am I afriad of feeling better?  Or am I afraid of losing that hope that I have that there is a way to feel better?  Because if I stop, there was still hope, it wasn't a failure.  I'm the one that failed.  As Jack would say, hmm.  

Bloody hell, more work.  Do I have what it takes to feel better is the question?  To let go of my grief and let go of my anger?  Am I brave enough to face the world without anger?  That's a scary question. 

11 comments:

  1. Grief is a strange beast. You certainly have a lot to make you angry but I think reading between the lines you are opening up to the idea that perhaps you can let go of the grief and the anger. I would say baby steps is the way forward. Take care. x

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  2. A lot of good questions here. A lot of very, very hard questions here. And all of them apply to me as well.
    I hope things go well with your brother. I am not in touch with any of my three brothers for the most part. And yes, there is grief about that too.

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  3. Oh my goodness I wish I knew the answers to your questions. I was always a happy-go-lucky person until I got married. Life really was just great, as far as I was concerned. But I knew within a couple of weeks I'd made a terrible mistake to marry him but I'd already spent all my money moving US back to the States for HIM. Then I spent 26 years virtually carrying a man who hated me because he felt inadequate. From there you get the violence and when I finally got away from him (26 wasted bloody years) I HATED that I hated him so much. It was eating me away but dammit I went on like that for years - until I had to let it go because my hatred for him was killing me. Now I don't wish him ill, nor anything - I just don't wish to ever think about him again, so I guess I get where you're coming from on just one small level. The opposite of love isn't hate - it's indifference. That being said, I hope getting together with your brother finally will be a happy new beginning for you!

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  4. You are figuring it out. These things can take a long, long time to figure out; some people never ask themselves these questions, and never figure it out. You are doing the responsible, smart, strong thing -- facing your vulnerability (all of us are vulnerable, aren't we? damn straight; if we think we aren't, we're kidding ourselves) and have come to understand how anger feels more powerful than hurt and grief and that's why it's the go-to for many people. Once you've recognized that, you've started to change; you're aware, and you'll catch yourself sometimes and make other choices that may make a difference. It may be a lifelong process. I'm observing (and feeling, and trying to accept and let go of) my own anger and resentments and am wondering if they are just part of life that will always be around, like conflict between people which always seems to raise its ugly head. If we insist on perfection -- say in relationships -- we are surely asking too much. It seems that conflict is inevitable; maybe anger will always come calling. I'm glad you're talking about this. I think a lot about it. -Kate

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  5. So many hard-won truths and simmering questions about anger and grief and love touched on in this post. We can't let go until we can. No easy answers. It's a mystery. That's for sure. One that we face alone in some ways but not at all alone in other ways. Good to know that your brother is coming for a visit. Always grateful for your honesty and for being able to glimpse the beauty in the world through what you see with your camera.

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  6. Somewhere recently I read that we all "have to find our own way of making peace with our loss" (and I would add anger and grief). It's a life long journey. Your honesty is a big step, I think.

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  7. Oh and I hope you and your brother will have a good reunion.

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  8. It sounds like you know you want a different way to process the grief and other feelings around and within you -- and that's a HUGE first step. (Not that you haven't known it before, but you're reaffirming it now.) I suspect turning off the anger won't be easy -- and perhaps not even entirely possible -- but with some professional help you can learn new ways of thinking about problems, maybe?

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  9. We all deal with grief in different ways, I often think my mother's anger was because she couldn't have children naturally. Well she could but my Dad couldn't, and I'm sure that's why she treated him like shit the rest of his life. He had mumps as a boy and left him sterile. Or so I was told by her, but who knows maybe that was a lie too.

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  10. Grief is a Process and a lot of Grief often creates a LOT of Process, doesn't it? I've come to the conclusion that those of us who've been thru a lot in Life develop a tough exterior while the interior can remain softened, but protected. I'm sure I can Feel deeply, but often I don't choose to Feel at all, since, that is a lot less Painful and keeps me functional thru a lot of shit we just sometimes have to go thru and don't have a lot of Choice about. Life is complex, your Family has certainly had a lot of Grief and a tough row to hoe too... but it has made us who we are and developed traits that I prefer to have like empathy, compassion and a strength to Deal with injustice as a strong Advocate. Tho' your Anger has been your protective mechanism my Friend, I'm sure when triggered you are a Force to be reckoned with and that isn't always such a bad thing when you're protecting others and your own Rights and standing up for the less fortunate. I know that if I don't control my Anger it can be Too Much, so mostly I don't resort to it, but it's there and I acknowledge it... and it looks like you do too.

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  11. I read this when you first posted it, and was so moved by your self reflection. An examined life is the first step to transformation. Grief burrows in, and can be hard to address once it adopts its disguises. Hugs.

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