https://www.meganhillukka.com/webinarthankyou 1043205109216070

93: What do I do with my child’s things?

93.png

Episode Pointers: 

  • There are certain things that we want to be gone right away, especially those things connected to their death.

  • In other people’s experience, there are other people who came into their lives and pushed them to get rid of things or pushed them to pack away their child’s clothes when they weren’t ready yet. And, they regretted it or they had to go back and redo it by themselves.

  • There’s a thing called linking objects. It is when you begin to connect to your dead child through certain things.

    Here are some ideas on what to do with their things:

    1. Made a quilt out of their clothes.

    2. Give some of their things to other children to use.

    3. Reusing clothes for your other children (If you feel okay with that.)

    4. Creating their bedroom into a way to remember them.

    5. Making a blanket out of their clothes.

  • You have the option and right to do nothing.

  • You don’t have to throw anything away if you don’t want to. You can begin to put the things into storage. You can take them out anytime if you wanted to.

  • Whatever you choose, there is no right or wrong way to deal with your child’s things. What’s very important is listening to your gut.


If you want more tools to help you, I have a workshop called Stop Talking Start Feeling, it’s a workshop that dives into emotions, what they are, and how you can begin to feel and process them and get them out of your body instead of stuffing them down. It also goes specifically into processing and releasing the emotions of guilt and sadness. You can get access to this workshop and all the extra things I have in there for only $27. Go to 
www.meganhillukka.com/workshop to check it out. 


If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: 
www.meganhillukka.com/community

92: STOP TALKING, START FEELING

92.png

Episode Pointers:

  • Stop Talking Start Feeling is a mini-program that helps you process the emotions inside of your body.

  • Many grieving mothers and other people have tried everything but they still failed to process their grief. They still don’t know what to do.

  • I’ve noticed that we get too focused on talking or trying to get through the experience. We forget that we need to sit with it and feel it too.


There are 2 ways in Processing Grief:

  1. Top-Down Processing - is where you work through this from the top.

 Examples :  therapy, talking, thinking,etc.

  1. Bottom-Up Processing - is where you physically feel and experience the emotions, the energy in your body. This is being present with the anxiety, the sadness, the guilt, the anger, whatever is coming up for you in your body.

Examples:  yoga, E.F.T, mindfulness, Somatic Experiencing, meditation, etc.

  • The whole purpose of Stop Talking Start Feeling is to give you the tools to process these seemingly too big emotions.

  • Imagine a wave of grief that comes crashing over you. If you just relax in it and learn to ride the wave, it’s easier, and then the wave flows out. It comes in and flows out.


If you want to dive in, go to www.stoptalkingstartfeeling.com- don’t hesitate if you have been struggling with the emotions of grief, or feel like the sadness or guilt is overwhelming you and keeping you very stuck. Why not get a life jacket you can wear when a grief wave comes and learn tools to support yourself.


If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community


91: Grounding Your Nervous System with Amisha Klawonn

91.png

Episode Notes:

  • When we started to get people into their bodies, into their breath, and just feeling what they needed to feel, they got better, and faster.

  • Yoga Therapy really looks at the person as a whole.

  •  We all have these different sides and these different pieces of us. But sometimes we look at them separately. Therapy helps you look at all of those different pieces of yourself.

Nervous System Grounding:

  • Our nervous system is the piece of us that gives us the resilience and the bandwidth to deal with things that happen in our lives. And so any sort of trauma, any sort of trauma is going to activate that system. 

  • And so your nervous system is on alert all the time. So what that's going to look like is little things that make you that that normally would not have made you anxious might make you anxious, 

Ways in Grounding your Nervous System:

  1. Try a Guided  Meditation/ Sit in silence

  2. Walking meditation

  3. Body Scan

  4. Breath Work ( Stimulating Breath Work and Calming Breath Work)

  • For example, Alternate Nostril Breathing ( Do it 10 times every morning, before anxiety is at its peak.)

How to get restorative sleep:

  1. As soon as you get up, get sunlight. This starts to set up your circadian rhythm.

  2. Get out of bed, put your feet on the ground, and take a couple of deep breaths.

  3. Work with a mantra. ( I am strong. I am in control today. I am safe. I am okay.)

  4. Move your body at least 30 minutes a day.

  5. Get off the screen two hours before bedtime.

  6. Get blue blocker glasses/blue light glasses.

You can connect with Amisha through the following:

Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/centered_mama/

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Onenessphysicaltherapy/

Website: www.onenesspt.com

Her Recommended Books:

  1. The Gifts of Imperfection by Brené Brown

  2. The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy


If you want more tools to help you, I have a workshop called Stop Talking Start Feeling, it’s a workshop that dives into emotions, what they are, and how you can begin to feel and process them and get them out of your body instead of stuffing them down. It also goes specifically into processing and releasing the emotions of guilt and sadness. You can get access to this workshop and all the extra things I have in there for only $27. Go to www.meganhillukka.com/workshop to check it out. 

If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community

 

Some links may contain affiliate links in which I receive a small commission if you decide to purchase something, this helps support the grief work I'm doing.



90: Radical Responsibility

90.png

Episode Pointers:

  • I know how quickly we can begin to pick apart and judge ourselves. 

  • I want you to look at yourself and your life with curiosity and ask:

  • Where can I take responsibility? 

  • Where is it not my responsibility to take?

  • Do  I need to set up boundaries?

  • When your cup is full, you cannot learn anything new.I hope you can open your heart and mind to talking about responsibility today.



What does it mean to take responsibility? There’s a term called taking radical responsibility. That you take responsibility for everything in your life. 



  • We wait for others to be better, and blame them for our problems. We do not have control over other people's actions or emotions. If we spend our lives trying to control how other people are going to act or feel, we lead a very depressing life because we have no control over that. 

  • The only person that you have control over, is you. You are the only person that can be responsible for your emotions, your thoughts, and your actions. Underneath that, is that no one else can make you feel or act a certain way.

  • It’s easy to blame others who make you sad, angry, frustrated and things like that. And this doesn’t mean you can’t have conversations about how you are feeling, or boundaries or anything like that. But that you have thoughts about what happened, and that’s what causes the emotion.

  • How does this relate to grief? Grief magnifies everything. It makes our emotions bigger, it makes our actions more extreme, it makes what triggers us more intense, it makes our reactions and responses more intense.

  • I know it feels easier to blame others. It’s easier to play victim and blame everyone else, instead of diving into the work. 

  • We all get to make the choice in how we move forward in our lives.



When you say you are not making a choice, you are making a choice. You make a choice to get up or stay down. Not choosing or giving up, is also a choice. So whatever you decide, this is the choice you make.



  • You can make choices that help you where you want to go, or choices that cause a lot more pain to you and the ones you love. 

  • This is how you can begin to take responsibility in your life. Taking responsibility gives you freedom and the ability to make the changes you want, because you are not waiting for someone else to come in and do it for you. You can immediately start to judge yourself and the choices you have made in your grief journey thus far, or you can decide that taking responsibility is empowering and gives you the reins back in your life to get up and start taking steps to where you want to go.

  •  When taking responsibility, you can also draw boundaries and you do not need to take on things that are not yours.




If you are ready to do this work, and you want a guide and a coach to help you sift through the emotions, the thoughts, and all the things that are keeping you stuck where you are at and from fully living your life even though the worst has happened, check out www.carryinggriefcoaching.com to learn how you can work 1:1 with me and I can help guide you through this.



If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community



89: Anger and Acting Out in Grief

89.png

Episode Pointers:

  • Grief does not give us the right to lash out at others. It does not give us a free pass on acting in whatever way we want.

  • Lashing out to others and using your anger to hurt others only hurts you more. 

  • Anger truly is an emotion that can explode and destroy so many things. It can come out as boiling frustration, explosive anger, resentment, or many other ways. Underneath anger is so many things- the lack of control over the situation, stress, fear, worry.

  • The anger, bitterness, frustration. All of that can come with grief. It’s so normal. It comes from this immense loss of control that we have over our lives. 

  • I do believe that God is the giver and taker of life, then why wouldn’t I be angry at him?

 I didn’t really feel I was angry at God, but wouldn’t that make sense? It didn’t mean I questioned his plan, or that I thought he was wrong, I was just angry that this was the way it was.

  • Anger in grief is so normal and it can show up in many ways. Anger at God, anger at a person, including the person who died. Anger at others. Anger at yourself. Anger at nothing, but everything.

  • You might not realize that you have anger. You might be in a place where anger is a bad way to feel and you don’t want to sit with it. It feels better to pretend you are not angry so you shove it under the rug and then maybe you are a better person because you are not angry.

But let me ask you this, just because you push the anger down and pretend it’s not there, does that make the anger go away? 

Or does it just make you fight the energy of the anger more and make it more stressful?

  • Allowing yourself to process, sit with, and release the anger without judgement is an incredible way to help yourself and in turn be the kind of person you want to be to those around you.


Tips in Dealing with Anger:

1. Notice what your emotional patterns are.

  • What 3 emotions do you feel every day? 

  • What 3 emotions come up for you the most often?

2. Anger Release Meditation

3.Find a way to release the built up tension in a healthy manner:

  • High intensity things - running, biking, punching

  • Writing

  • Screaming

  • Punching bag

4. Allow the anger to surface and release from your body:

  •  Notice what you want to do when you feel the anger in your body.

  •  Notice how you act, or want to respond. 

  •  Notice where the anger is in your body.

  •  Notice the sensations, the intensity, how it feels.

  •  Notice if you clench your jaw, or your fists, if your shoulders go up.

  •  Get really present with how your body feels with anger.

5. Imagine the anger is like energy in your body. If you stuff it down, it will just fester in your body and explode out

  • What is the thought that is driving the anger? 

  • What are the thoughts there behind it?


6. Understand that no matter who/what your anger is directed at right now, know that it is not the reason why you are angry. 

Anger will not just go away by itself. It’s a very powerful emotion and a very damaging emotion if we don’t properly deal with it. Allow yourself to feel and process anger. 

I want to encourage you to use these tools that I have offered, to at least take one of them, and begin to release and hold space for the anger inside of you. If you want guidance and 1:1 coaching to help you work through this- you can go to www.carryinggriefcoaching.com to learn more about how you can work with me. I want you to remember that there is no shame or judgement here, but how important it is to get curious with your anger and the energy of anger in your body, so you can continue to strive to be the best mom you can be.

If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community

Some links may contain affiliate links in which I receive a small commission if you decide to purchase something, this helps support the grief work I'm doing.





88: Suicide, Reiki and death With Sharon Ehlers

88.png

Episode Pointers:

  • Guilty blame and self blame will really rip you apart. 

  • Joining a  group/community who has gone through the same experience with you will make you feel less lonely.

  • There's different timing, divine timing for different people. Definitely.

  • When you're having a difficult time, these energy centers in your body get stuck. It gets stuck mostly in our heart and our lungs. That’s the reason why most of the people who are grieving experiences chest pains and difficulty in breathing.

  • If you balance the physical, the emotional, and the spiritual components of grief, and you address all three of them at the same time, that you can actually have the tools that you need to kind of keep your head above water, and tread.

  • It doesn't cure grief. Nothing cures grief, but it keeps you in a place where you have the stamina to be able to deal with it.

  • Being a Death Midwife/Death Doula is giving a person who is dying tools that they can use to help themselves through that transition process.

  • Anam Cara is somebody that navigates through, navigates a dying loved one in their families through death, right through death, and then after death.

Her Recommendations:

Favorite Books:

  1. On Death and Dying by  Elizabeth Kubler Ross

  2. The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

Her Books:

  1. Grief Reiki

  2. Grief Diaries:Lost by Suicide

Support Group:

  1. Didi Hirsch S. Mark Taper Foundation Center 

Her Social Media Accounts:

If you want more tools to help you, I have a workshop called Stop Talking Start Feeling, it’s a workshop that dives into emotions, what they are, and how you can begin to feel and process them and get them out of your body instead of stuffing them down. It also goes specifically in to processing and releasing the emotions of guilt and sadness. You can get access to this workshop and all the extra things I have in there for only $27. Go to www.meganhillukka.com/workshop to check it out. 


If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community


Some links may contain affiliate links in which I receive a small commission if you decide to purchase something, this helps support the grief work I'm doing.



87: Are You Keeping Busy?

87.png

Have you been busy all day, you exhaust yourself so that at night hopefully you can be so exhausted you just fall asleep without having to think about your dear child? 

I get it. I’ve been there, there is absolutely no judgement from me. 

But when does it end?

Is this kind of behavior sustainable?

Is this the way you want to keep living the rest of your life? 

Where every single day the goal is to not stop because if you stop , you start to think or feel something painful. So, do you keep busy?

Keeping busy feels good, because it feels like you are doing something, when with grief there’s not much you can quote unquote do. There’s nothing you can change, and so keeping busy helps keep your mind off of what is going on.

And we get this advice all the time from well meaning people. “Just keep busy so you don’t have to think about it. Maybe you should get a job so you can keep busy.” I think this is some of the most damaging advice we can give to grievers and tell ourselves.

Keeping busy feels good, because it keeps you from thinking or feeling things that are painful. It’s scary to think that if you start to get depressed you will never come out of it. That if you start to feel something, you will be stuck in that forever. Yes, if you don’t have the tools and skills to move through it, it’s easy to get stuck, which is why I would encourage you to join me in Stop Talking Start Feeling, where you can begin to process and work through things in a slow way- you can go to www.meganhillukka.com/workshop to join there, or else make sure you have a guide who is walking alongside of you, who knows how to help you through this experience of pain, and the thoughts that come with grief.

Is this the way you want to keep living?

Understanding that this is a coping mechanism is hugely important, and might help you loosen some judgment you might have about yourself.

 First start with- getting curious. Is this how I’m coping with my grief?

 Is this a way I’m trying to manage all the thoughts and emotions that feel so overwhelming for me?

Remember, in order to let go of this coping mechanism, it’s important to begin to build tools and skills in another way, so that you can handle and process the emotions and thoughts that right now feel so scary. So you don’t need to do everything at once, and you don’t need to try to drink from a fire hose. Make little changes, and slowly you can begin to shift from keeping busy and running yourself ragged every day, to having skills and tools to process what’s going on inside.

What would your life look like if you didn’t need to run yourself into exhaustion every day?

What would your relationships look like? 

What would you do with your life? 

Some ways you can begin to shift from keeping busy, to connecting with your emotions:

  1. Start to notice when a thought comes, or an emotion starts to come up, and you shove it down. You don’t have to do anything with it yet, but start to notice how often you do that, and what the thought or emotion is.

  2. Start saying no more often. Your energy tank is already beyond empty. Grief empties your emotional tank and energy tank and the capacity you have to give to others right now. You may feel like you want to give, but you might be giving from a place of exhaustion, rather than a place of true service. I do not know, you have to look at your own self to know what’s true for you. But I would encourage you to be mindful of where you put your energy, and start seeing where you can cut back and begin to make more space in your life, so you can start to care for yourself and your grief.

  3. Get curious with how you are acting in your life. Notice if you are keeping busy, and imagine watching yourself from above yourself as you go about your day. Watching how when something happens, that you immediately have to go clean, or when you get worked up, you keep busy in a certain way. Just get curious and start becoming aware of your patterns.

    It’s so important to not bring judgement into the picture when you do this. 

So often, when we become aware of our actions, emotions, or thoughts, we start to judge ourselves. 

What’s wrong with me?

Why don't other moms think that way?

What kind of person does that? 

But lead with curiosity, and let yourself be open to learning how you are doing things, because it is from that place that you can begin to change things. 

When you put judgement on it, all you want to do is shove it back down and hide. Bring it out into the open, and get curious. 

Are you someone who keeps busy?

 Share in the Facebook group what you learned in this episode, and what small steps you are going to take today, slow down and begin to make time for your emotions, your thoughts, and your grief.

If you want more tools to help you, I have a workshop called Stop Talking Start Feeling, it’s a workshop that dives into emotions, what they are, and how you can begin to feel and process them and get them out of your body instead of stuffing them down. It also goes specifically into processing and releasing the emotions of guilt and sadness. You can get access to this workshop and all the extra things I have in there for only $27. Go to www.stoptalkingstartfeeling.com to check it out. 

If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community

Some links may contain affiliate links in which I receive a small commission if you decide to purchase something, this helps support the grief work I'm doing.

86: Physical Sickness in Grief

86.png

In this episode, we are going to talk about how grief affects our health physically.

Episode Pointers:

  • Grief, trauma, anxiety, and everything that came in between can cause stress. It will then manifest into physical symptoms. Thus, Grief can show up physically in our bodies.

  • Emotions have a big role inside our bodies.  So, processing  your emotions are very important in dealing with grief.

  • When you are stressed, have anxiety, fear, and of those emotions that put stress on your body, your immune system is lowered. So, you have a bigger chance of getting sick. It’s very common to feel all of those things after your child dies, your body has never had to go through such an painfully emotional experience.

  • Emotions are truly a physical thing. Your body is connected with your emotions. Learn to sit with your emotions, feel, process, and experience them physically. 

  • According to the Emotion Code by Dr. Bradley Nelson, emotions can get trapped in your body, and then that part of your body can become physically sick. Think of the Broken Heart Syndrome. Your heart hurts so bad, that your heart begins to actually get stressed and sick.

  • Other grieving moms feel these common symptoms: a pain in their chest, or their body, or horrific pain in their stomach, headache and more . And no matter how many medications they take, or they go to their doctor, and there’s nothing wrong with them. They can’t find a physical reason why they are wrong. It is when we need to take a look at the emotions inside of our bodies and answer these questions:

  •  What emotion is there in that part of your body?

  •  How can you begin to care for yourself?

  •  How can you release that emotion that’s trapped there?

  • In the Emotion Code, it says that grief often settles into the lungs. And, a common thing that happens is that it’s hard to breathe when you are grieving. It’s like there is a big weight on your chest and you cannot get a full breath of air. I definitely had this, and when I would try to do a meditation or something like that where they had you breath in for 5 and out for 7, I was like what in the world? I can only breathe in for 3, it was really hard to get a full breath of air. 

Here are some ways you can support your body to prevent it from experiencing physical responses:

  • Accept that it’s part of your grief journey. There’s nothing wrong with you.

  • Start to notice ways you can slow down, and care for the grief inside of your body. My mini-workshop, STOP TALKING, START FEELING is a great place to start to begin to learn how to process the emotions inside of you and let them flow instead of staying stuck. You can get that by going to www.stoptalkingstartfeeling.com

  • Try to get more sleep - refer to my episode ( Episode 85 ) about sleep last week to help with ideas on how to do that.

  • Drink water, eat healthier as you can, and do the best you can.

  • Get support and help from those around you, and lean onto others as much as you can, because you don’t need to do this all alone right now. Eventually the goal is to be able to stand on your own two feet again, but right now, allow the people around you to help you, and invest in help and support for yourself as well. 

  • Make major changes in your life.

This is uncharted territory for you, and so give yourself grace as you navigate through it. And as you learn what works for you, and how you can begin to process the emotions.

I truly believe that physical symptoms, and emotional symptoms are all related. So caring for what’s going on inside of you, will certainly help with the physical symptoms you are feeling in your body.

Recommended book :  The Emotion Code by Dr. Bradley Nelson

If you want more tools to help you, I have a workshop called Stop Talking Start Feeling, it’s a workshop that dives into emotions, what they are, and how you can begin to feel and process them and get them out of your body instead of stuffing them down. It also goes specifically into processing and releasing the emotions of guilt and sadness. You can get access to this workshop and all the extra things I have in there for only $27. Go to www.stoptalkingstartfeeling.com to check it out. 

If you are a grieving mother and looking for others who know the pain of child loss, come join my free Grieving Moms Community Facebook group: www.meganhillukka.com/community

Some links may contain affiliate links in which I receive a small commission if you decide to purchase something, this helps support the grief work I'm doing.