THE
GIFT OF GRIEF
A
Mother’s Story
My
daughter Jolene died at the age of twenty- three.
She didn’t die of disease, or
accident, or even murder. I guess you could call it murder. She murdered
herself: she committed suicide.
I know grief on a first name,
call-in-the-middle-of-the-night basis.
The first time I read the beatitudes
after her death, the words slapped me in the face. “Blessed are they that
mourn.”
Oh, I understood the comfort part.
God comforted me, in spades, giving me strength to carry on and using me as a
testimony to the people around me.
But losing a daughter in the prime
of her life did not feel like a blessing. Today, almost five years later, it
still feels wrong, unnatural, unnecessary, heart-rending, life-changing. All of
that, and more.
I wrestled with the idea of grief as
a blessing. Mourning and grief are feelings; I didn’t “feel” happy, no matter
what word Jesus used in preaching the Sermon on the Mount.
Jesus didn’t deny my feelings,
discredit them, or tell me to be happy when my heart had been ripped from my
chest. Instead, He blessed me with His actions, with facts that took on a whole
new reality. Ten months after the tragedy, I took stock of the rock-bottom
truths which had gained a new depth.
·
Jesus died to give me
eternal life.
·
Jolene has eternal
life because she placed her trust in Jesus.
I had witness her decision to follow Christ, I have heard
her testimony from her own lips and read her words. She is alive.
·
Jolene is in heaven,
where tears and pain are a thing of the past.
Even if Jolene could return, I would never ask her to. She
is healed of the Borderline Personality Disorder that made her so uncertain and
unhappy.
·
Jolene is watching me
as I continue to run the race before me.
Jolene wants my happiness. She is cheering me on. I am the
missing generation—she is there with her great-grandmother and her grandmother.
·
I will see Jolene
again.
The more of my loved ones go ahead, the more I want to join
them. What a reunion!
·
Because God became
man, He understands my pain and mourns with me.
I knew Jesus had experienced grief—look at Lazarus. He
might have also known the pain of losing someone to suicide. He cried right
along with me.
·
Jesus welcomed Jolene
home.
Jolene wrote about Jesus hugging her in His arms. As life
ebbed from her body, He cradled her in His lap.
I have always accepted these facts
as part of my believe system. With the blessing of grief, facts traveled from
my head to my heart and etched themselves on the raw nerve endings, seeking to
scab over as I healed.
As if all of those biblical truths weren’t enough of a
blessing, God added another to enrich the life-from-death truth of the gospel:
my first grandchild was born nine months’ after Jolene’s death. Jordan
Elizabeth Franklin will never meet her aunt this side of heaven, but her smile,
her bouncing brown curls and bright brown eyes, her giggles—she is God’s gift
here and now.
Holidays have come and gone. Each Resurrection Day reminds
me of my loss; we learned of Jolene’s death on the Monday of Passion Week. With
Christmas came a different kind of celebration. What I enjoyed wasn’t the
trappings of Christmas—presents and lights and trees seemed hollow without
Jolene... I went through most of advent praying, Lord, just let me survive.
Even the things that gave me joy faded. How could I sing my
favorite Christmas carols without remembering the caroling Jolene and I did
each year, waiting at the bus stops after a night of Christmas shopping?
How could we decorate the tree without crying over each and
every memory? Baby’s first Christmas 1984. A hand-crafted tree-top angel made
out of a lace doily. A blue delft disc reminded me of the visit we made to the
Dutch Festival, and the golden boot with the Olympic rings brought back vivid
memories of going to the Salt Lake City Olympics.
And yet, as I struggled, Christmas became more real than
ever. God became man.
The incarnation—God becoming man—that is the blessing of
grief for me.
And I know it is small consolation but you can comfort as none other can comfort, and share your blessings (see list above).
ReplyDeletelove, hugs, and prayers
Kathy
Kathleen, that is one of the major purposes of suffering--to comfort others who are also suffering. I look at that in the second chapter of my book. Which is where I am putting Jolene's stor.
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