Grief & Loss Information Information Research

Tell a Friend about this Site

Watching Death


Like it or not, we think in line with our customs and tradition often times, right down to the level of how we think of death, or about death. I was a licensed counselor for many years, and the issue came up a few times, and I was sad at its results, to hear Americas shamefully trying to avoid talking about it. But let me put that aside and finish the article. Yes customs and traditions set down; do play a big part in how we view death. Death being a normal and natural thing; we mimic our parents and our TV heroes, and how they portray death. Why so much gloom out there on death [?] It has been around for a long time, as long as I've been around anyhow, fifty-seven years. It is often a taboo subject to talk bout it in certain places. But you can see a lot of books on the subject; more than I can count.

I live in Minnesota, and Peru, and I have traveled much through Mexico, Central America, and South America. The Maya, the Inca and the Aztecs took dying as a preparation period, along with rituals to be put into place; when they knew it was near; my mother was much like them. She told me about her preparing for death, three years before she died at 83, in 2003. She was looking death into its face. And just before she died she said, "I'm ready, I'm alright with it, let me go." I was sad, but being sad only says we had good times together, that is what brought my tears, no more times. Selfish in a way; also, my mother left me with some fine last words, something TV never leaves out and parents that do not allow their children to see their dying grandparents, and so forth; on TV, or at the movies, all one can find are grunts for their disappearing heroes. That is not life.

People fear to talk about death, as if it was a storm out of control, brewing just for them. Death is seldom viewed by children in America (as I previously implied), as if it was a private affair. I seen my mother in the hospital 26-times in 23-days, when she was dying; and she was laughing and joking in her death bed. I am grateful for that time. It is a choice I feel, and I'm glad I had the deciding vote. I believe children should be allowed to visit and see their grandparents on their dying beds, should they so wish to, and even pushed a bit to do so. My son's daughter saw her grandmother while she was dying in the hospital, and started crying, she was but a child. But what I feel she will remember is not her crying, but her great-grandmother's smiling, for that was the last picture she saw of her.

Perhaps death is too much like hell for Americans, because most people I talk to think everyone is going to heaven, and thus, hell no longer exists. Be that as it may, hell and death seem to be connected; as my mother used to say, "Dennis, why does everyone think they're going to heaven." I couldn't answer that, but now I can, hell is too close to death, and death is their nemeses.

Author and Poet Dennis Siluk, his web site is: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com


MORE RESOURCES:

Web site offers tips on dealing with grief, loss
Reading Eagle, PA - Nov 10, 2008
By Jane Glenn Haas Yes, death is always with us, but the older we get, the more we seem to grapple with its presence. And death is never a welcome topic in ...


Help for managing grief, loss
Wicked Local Brockton, MA - Nov 12, 2008
By Elaine Allegrini Grief and loss come in many forms, from the loss of a job or home to broken relationships and death. A program for grief and loss ...


Provena planning workshops for bereaved near holidays
Urbana/Champaign News-Gazette, IL - Nov 10, 2008
The Provena Hospice Center for Grief, Loss and Hope says it can help. The organization is offering two free workshops in Champaign and Westville to help ...


Dealing with a dog’s death
Modesto Bee, CA - Nov 18, 2008
Coming to terms with the loss of a pet is never easy. The death of a dog can affect people in the same way that losing a family member or close friend would ...


Christmas season a difficult time for many
Orillia Packet & Times, Canada - Dec 1, 2008
"An event like this allows us to really be authentic in the fact that it is a happy time of year, but we are still dealing with grief, loss and sadness," ...


Suffering the pain of loss
Irish Times, Ireland - Nov 10, 2008
Two days after his father Robert Dunlop died, son Michael went on to win the North West 200 and dedicate the win to his father. Here he is comforted by his ...
'Mammy's gone to heaven' Irish Times
all 2 news articles


Class aims to help children of inmates
Beaver Dam Daily Citizen, WI - Nov 28, 2008
Clark, who earned her master's degree in special education from Edgewood College in 1998, said the course evolved from a Grief, Loss and Recovery class she ...


Indie Watch
Tucson Weekly, AZ - Nov 26, 2008
Expect one-of-a-kind shorts, animations and other experiments regarding themes of ancestry, global rituals and festivals relating to death, grief, loss, ...


Talk for seniors addresses grief
Mirror, MI - Nov 27, 2008
The problems of "Grief, Loss and Mourning" will be the subject of the second talk in a Troy series especially for seniors. The event will be from 7:30-8:30 ...


Unit encourages students to ask tough questions about death, loss
Baraboo News Republic, WI - Nov 25, 2008
A four-week unit on grief, loss and death will be presented to fourth-grade classrooms at different times this year, based upon lessons backed by the ...

Grief-Loss - Google News



MaineBannerExchange

home | site map
© 2006