• Home
  • Blog
  • Daze of Dari

Darielle Brooklyn

Darielle Brooklyn

Tag Archives: death

Surviving the Loss of Your Adult Sibling

16 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by Darielle Brooklyn in bereavement, Grief, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

bereavement, death, death of a sibling, Grief, Loss, sibling loss

439e1629eb0ff3320074ab973ab5ce95.jpg

The most neglected loss in adult life is that of the death of a sibling. Though many of us will face this loss, society believes that the loss of a sibling during our adult life has little to no disruptive effect on surviving brothers and sisters. This couldn’t be further from the truth! The loss has significant meant and mourning the loss can be very difficult.

A relationship between siblings has unique and very special characteristics. Much research has been conducted and it has been concluded that brothers and sisters greatly influence each other with regards to identity, self-concept and personality. The sibling relationship is more complex than most other relationships. There is a mixture of affection and ambivalence, camaraderie and fierce competition. There is no one else who knows us better other than our parents and, just like our parents, our siblings have been there from the very beginning. However, unlike our parents, our siblings are people we assume will be part of our lives for the rest of our lives. In terms of the span of time, the intimacy, and the shared experience of childhood, no other relationship rivals the connection we have with our adult brothers or sisters. From bullies in school to teenage broken hearts, from careers to marriage to unfulfilled dreams, our siblings have been there through all of it. They were beside us through our journey through time. Our siblings are our keeper of secrets, they are our first friends as well as our rivals for our parents’ affections. They are  a secure and familiar constant in an often precarious and uncertain world.

The loss of a sibling in adulthood is the loss of someone who shared your childhood history with you. Your sibling was a major part of your past and is part of the roots to your past. Your sibling shares common memories as well as critical childhood experiences and family history. For this reason when you lose a sibling, you also lose one of your major connections to your past.

Your sibling knew you in a different way, a way those who know you as an adult will never understand.  Consequently and unfortunately, a constant is gone. This can cause you to feel anxious and insecure. Even if you didn’t have constant contact with your sibling, you still had the security of knowing another member of your family was there. Your sibling has a symbolic spot in your life even if they weren’t part of your day-to-day life.

When you lose a sibling in adulthood, it can make you feel older and cause you to see that your family is dwindling. Sometimes this may cause the surviving sibling to be concerned about their own death if they lost their sibling to an illness or disease.

Mourning after the loss of a sibling can be complicated. The ambivalence that is normally present in a sibling relationship may bring on guilt and guilt in turn, will complicate mourning.

Depending on the relationship, you may feel guilt and regret if the relationship was not what you had always wished it would be. There may be guilt because you feel you did not spend enough time together or that you argued too often. Many siblings experience survivor guilt especially when they remember times that they wished their sibling would just disappear.

The adult who loses a sibling shares many similar issues with parents who lose adult children. You may find you do not have much part in decisions pertaining to the death and the funeral. The lack of control is combined with the failure of others to recognize that you too are profoundly bereaved. Much of the attention will go to the deceased’s parents, spouse and children.

How many times did I personally hear “I’m so sorry to hear about your brother. How is your Mom?” Or “You need to be strong for your Mom. She is hurting so bad and needs you so much right now.” These are just a couple of unhelpful and quite honestly, hurtful things that bereaved siblings often hear. People tend to give their focus of their sympathy to the surviving parents, spouse or children. They often ignore the grief of the sibling. Siblings are unfortunately overlooked in their own heartache and grief. Do you realize there are actually more books on losing a pet than losing a sibling?

Adult siblings often suppress their grief. They immediately fall into the role of caregiver for their surviving parents or for the sibling’s spouse and children. Adult siblings sense a loss deep within the core of their being. Siblings after all, are the lens that we look through often to see our childhood. Many adults admit that no one inside or outside of their family recognized this.

When grief is delayed or suppressed, often due to falling into these roles, mourning also gets delayed and suppressed. No one gets to skip mourning. You either need to complete the grief work or risk getting stuck or frozen in your grief. The latter may cause significant consequences, such as anxiety, depression or illness.

If your sibling lived in another state, it may be extremely difficult to accept their death since there is no acute absence to signal that he or she is permanently gone. This will even further complicate grief.

Death of a sibling changes family roles and relationships. This can greatly cause additional losses or extreme stress. The death may change your position in the family. You now may be the eldest and expected to care for your parent. You may have instantly become an only child, or both.

The fact is when a sibling dies, you lose both the past and the future. When you lose your sibling, you grieve for what was in the past and you grieve for what should have been the future.

My brother’s death shook me to my core but I choose to live each day to its fullest. Perhaps I am strong but the truth is my brother’s loss will remain with me for my entire life, just like he was supposed to.

Please remember you are not alone and you are not forgotten. Just like me, you will carry your sibling with you throughout your life. They will forever remain in our hearts, thoughts and memories.

I am deeply sorry for your loss.

 

You-are-forever-in-my-heart.jpg

Love and Connection After Death

18 Thursday Feb 2016

Posted by Darielle Brooklyn in Grief, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

bereavement, death, Grief, Loss, Love, mouring, suicide

grief_is_the_price,-96399.jpeg

Today is my parents’ 60th wedding anniversary so it seemed fitting for me to write about love continuing after the loss of someone you love.

Love is greater than death. Love is the one thing that will continue through time. Though the years go by and you begin to create memories without your loved one, the love still remains. Your loved ones live in both your heart and memories forever. The pain of their loss softens. The love stays just as strong.

death-ends-life-not-a-relationship.jpg

I believe even the biggest skeptic, somewhere down deep, believes death is not the end. After all, energy cannot be created or destroyed. It can only be transformed. This allows for the belief that we are transformed after our physical body is gone. This belief also allows us to continue our relationships with our loved ones.

02fc16d2cbdaac156f95c79c47ff3518.jpg

Here are some ways you can continue your relationship with your loved one:

Talk to Them

Whether you speak out loud or silently in your head, this is the most common way that you can continue a relationship with your loved one. Talking allows you to feel a powerful connection.

Write to Them

Buy yourself a journal. Whenever there is something that you want to share with them, write your loved one a letter. Just because you can no longer pick up the phone to share something with them doesn’t mean you can no longer communicate with them. Writing will bring you feelings of both strength and liberation. It’s powerful.

Include Your Loved One on Special Occasions

You will be thinking about your loved one and missing them. The only natural thing to do is to include them!  One way you can do this is by setting a place setting for them at the holiday table. This allows you to feel that they are a part of the celebration.

Speak About Them to New People

Throughout your life, you are going to meet people who never got to know your loved one. These people may include a new friend, a significant other, or you may get married and have children. A way to keep your loved one’s legacy alive is to continue to keep their stories going. Tell new people things about them and show them photographs.

Continue to Make Them Proud

Live your best life, do your best and continue to make them proud as if they were still present in the physical form.

Have a Quilt Made of Their Clothing

Imagine yourself wrapped up in pieces of their clothing. Imagine feeling close and connected to them with a comforting reminder that their love is literally wrapped around you.

Wear a Piece of Their Jewelry

There is something to be said about wearing a piece of your loved one’s jewelry and feeling that connection. It is a comforting reminder of your loved one’s role in your life.

These are just a few ways to continue to feel connected to your loved one.

Remember, your loved one may physically be gone from your life but they are forever a part of you. You never have to let them go. They took a piece of you when they left the physical earth, yet at the same time, they left a piece of themselves behind for you. They are forever a part of you just as you are forever a part of them.

Your loved ones are forever in the sacred spaces of both your heart and mind. It is in these places where you can always reach for them and hug them.

I hope this brings you some comfort.

love_is_forever_by_brandtk-d5h4oag.jpg

 

Surviving the Loss of a Loved One

11 Thursday Feb 2016

Posted by Darielle Brooklyn in Grief, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

bereavement, death, Grief, Loss, suicide

images.jpg

A truer statement I cannot find.  Grief is the price we pay for love.

Death is one of the most confusing emotions we experience. We don’t and can’t imagine a future without our loved ones and forever is not a time frame we can actually fully grasp. Unfortunately, death is a reality that will affect every single one of us. It is something that very few actually consider or anticipate. It doesn’t seem real until it happens to us. The sad reality is that people die every single day and it is devastating for those who love them. Whether it is a parent, grandparent, sibling, or friend, the pain cuts deep and can seem to leave a hole in our heart. Even if the death is expected, dealing with the death of a loved one is extremely difficult, but it becomes even more difficult when the death of a loved one is sudden and unexpected.

I know how devastating an unexpected loss can be. I lost my brother May 14, 2013, very unexpectedly. One day he was living and part of this earth, and the next day he was gone. It was a crippling shock. As sudden and as shattering as it was, the pain I felt was just as severe as the loss of my dad, which I had some time to prepare for.

With my dad, there was some time to struggle with the idea of him not being around anymore. With my brother, it was instantaneous. There was no time to prepare myself for his death. In an instant, he was gone.

When you expect a loved one’s death it’s like walking into a fighting ring to endure a severe, brutal beating. You know it’s coming but it still hurts like hell. When grief is unexpected, it’s terribly agonizing and you feel powerless. It simply takes longer to adjust after an unexpected death.

I lost my dad to leukemia. He was diagnosed in 1991. I didn’t find out he had leukemia until April of 2006. My parents chose to keep it to themselves. My dad never wanted anyone to view him as a sick man. He was honestly the strongest man I knew. He succumbed to his leukemia June 9, 2006.

Between the time people found out about my dad’s illness, and before he passed away, people came to visit him. My brother flew up from Florida to see him. There was some time for his loved ones to prepare and accept the solemn possibility of his death. Even though it was a possibility, and we had some time to prepare, everyone was still completely grief-stricken when he passed away. I still miss him to the core of my soul and still get very emotional but I have loving memories of a great man who is so deeply missed. There is no shocking, devastating wound. There remains a sad emptiness for a man who meant the world to me.

Though you may expect the death of a loved one, and the pain is different than unexpected death, it is still equally as deep. Though you may expect a loved one’s death, and you can get a jump start on your grieving process, you grieve just as deeply. Grief knows no boundaries.

A loss by suicide is considered an unexpected and sudden loss. Warning signs are not taken seriously and people truly don’t recognize them until the loss occurs. A loss to suicide is very different from any other form of death. An important thing to remember is that if you lose someone to suicide, you cannot hold yourself responsible for their actions. It is natural and normal to feel guilt but the reality of the matter is that they they chose their destiny. You did not choose it for them.

Unfortunately, any death is a horrible thing regardless of the manner in which we lose someone. However, suicide is a unique death and has a higher complexity of emotional waves than any other type of loss.

The bottom line is whether death is sudden or expected, grieving is very similar.  Yes, we all grieve differently but the coping mechanisms remain constant no matter how a loved one passed.

Some myths about grief are:

MYTH: The pain will go away faster if you ignore it.

Fact: Trying to ignore your pain or keep it from surfacing will only make it worse in the long run. It is necessary to face your grief and actively deal with it for healing.

MYTH: It’s important to be “be strong” in the face of loss.

Fact: Feeling sad, frightened, or lonely is a normal reaction to loss. Crying doesn’t mean you are weak. You don’t need to “protect” your family or friends by putting on a brave front.

MYTH: If you don’t cry, it means you aren’t sorry about the loss.

Fact: Crying is a normal response to sadness, but it’s not the only one. Those who don’t cry may feel the pain just as deeply as others. They may simply have other ways of expressing it.

And my all-time favorite:

MYTH: Grief should last about a year.

Fact: There is no right or wrong time frame for grieving. How long it takes can differ from person to person.

Even though it is an exhausting and painful process, and the bereaved experience intense emotions and symptoms after a loss, the majority emerge with their sanity and emotional health intact.

For more information about grief and healing, and for group support information as well as various ways to cope, I have provided some information and helpful websites:

Grief.com

American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

Journey of Hearts

Survivors of Suicide Loss

If you are presently grieving the loss of a loved one, please accept my condolences.  I pray that you find comfort from family and friends during this most difficult time of your life.

images-1.jpg

I am living proof that you DO survive grief, even though it may not seem it at the time.  I hope I was able to validate how you are feeling as well as give you hope in knowing that you too will survive your loss.  You are going to be okay.

Hugs.

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 258 other subscribers
Follow Darielle Brooklyn on WordPress.com

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Darielle Brooklyn
    • Join 55 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Darielle Brooklyn
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...