Ball in a jar

Discussion Board Forums Grief Management Ball in a jar

Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #57414
    nancy246
    Spectator

    Thanks CM. I am going to share this with my support group. Hugs. Nancy

    #57413
    lalupes
    Spectator

    Thank you, I found this very helpful.

    #57412
    marions
    Moderator

    CM….we will cherish this post – visualization at its best.
    Hugs and love,
    Marion

    #57411
    darla
    Spectator

    That is awesome. Thanks for sharing it with all of us. I plan to share it with others to whom it may be of some help.

    #57410
    lainy
    Spectator

    CM, this is absolutely the best thing I have seen in a long time! It is soooo true! Thank you for this.

    #6318
    cm
    Spectator

    A friend shared this with me today… I think it makes sense

    …One day I saw a notice for a talk on helping children through bereavement by Barbara Monroe, the Chief Executive of St Christopher’s Hospice in London. When I arrived, what I saw resembled a physics lesson. On the table before her was a very large glass jar. Beside were three balls: one large, one medium-sized, one small. Without a word, she began to stuff the large ball into the jar. With a great deal of effort, she wedged it in. ‘There!’ she said. ‘That’s how grieving feels at first. If grief is the ball and the jar is your world, you can see how the grief fills everything. There is no air to breathe, no space to move around. Every thought, every action reminds you of your loss.’ Then she pulled the large ball out of the jar and put in the medium-sized ball. She held it up again, tipping it so the ball rolled around a bit. ‘Maybe you think that’s how it will feel after a time – say, after the first year. Grieving will no longer fill every bit of space in your life.’ Then she rolled the ball out and plopped in the small ball. ‘Now, say, by the second or third year, that’s how grieving is supposed to feel. Like the ball, it has shrunk. So now you can think of grief as taking up a very small part of your world – it could almost be ignored if you wish to ignore it.’ For a moment, considering my own crammed jar, I thought of leaving. ‘That’s what everyone thinks grieving is like,’ the voice continued. ‘And it’s all rubbish.’ I settled back into my seat. Two other glass jars were produced from under the table: one larger, one very large. ‘Now,’ she said,imperiously. ‘Regard.’ Silently, she took the largest ball and squeezed it slowly into the least of the three jars. It would barely fit. Then she pulled the ball out and placed it in the next-larger jar. There was room for it to roll around. Finally, she took it out and dropped it into the largest glass jar. ‘There,’ she said, in triumph. ‘That’s what grieving is really like. If your grieving is the ball, like the ball here it doesn’t get any bigger or any smaller. It is always the same. But the jar is bigger. If your world is this glass jar, your task is to make your world bigger.’ ‘You see,’ she continued, ‘no-one wants their grief to shrink. It is all they have left of the person who died. But if your world gets larger, then you can keep your grief as it is, but work around it.’ Then she turned to us. ‘Older people coping with grief often try to keep their world the same. It is a mistake. If I have one thing to say to all of you it is this: make your world larger. Then there will be room in it for your grieving, but your grieving will not take up all the room. This way you can find space to make a new life for yourselves.

Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
  • The forum ‘Grief Management’ is closed to new topics and replies.