Disappointment and loss are a part of every life.
Many times we can put
them behind us and get on with the rest of our lives.
But not everything is
amenable to this approach.
Some things are too big or too deep to do this,
and we will have to leave important parts of ourselves behind if we treat
them in this way.
These are the places where wisdom begins to grow in us.
It
begins with suffering that we do not avoid or rationalize or put behind us.
It starts with the realization that our loss,
whatever it is, has become a
part of us and has altered our lives so profoundly that
we cannot go back to
the way it was before.
The thing about the many strategies we use to
shelter ourselves from feeling loss is that none of them leads to healing.
Although denial, rationalization, substitution, avoidance,
and the like may
numb the pain of loss,
every one of them hurts us in some far more
fundamental ways.
None is respectful toward life or toward process.
None acknowledges our capacity for finding meaning or wisdom.
Source: Rachel Naomi Remen, MD. My Grandfather's
Blessings