Here’s why making time to grieve is important. Imagine right now you are carrying around a heavy suitcase. It’s always there, and you are busy surviving every moment, and inside the suitcase, there might be things like anxiety, trauma, terror, inability to sleep, isolation, loneliness, overeating, not eating, anger towards anyone and everyone, health issues, not wanting to live. All these things can live inside the suitcase. And you’re carrying them around 24/7.
When you don’t take the time to grieve, you just keep constantly carrying these things around, thinking that you don’t have the time, so you just gotta keep doing what you're doing, that maybe will time these things will get lighter and easier and maybe someday in the future, you will have more time to take care of yourself.
That’s a huge lie. The only time is now. There is no time in the future. If you’re not making it now, you’re not going to make it in the future. And as I always say, time does nothing. In twenty years, you’ll open that suitcase up and there they all will still be, anxiety, trauma, fear, panic, inability to sleep, health issues, overeating, keeping busy, whatever they are. Or maybe you’re taking medication now to manage them, but they are still a part of your life.
So, what if you made time for your grief? What if you sat down with that suitcase, and began lifting out the things inside of it? Taking care of them. Clearing them. Processing them. You still have to carry the suitcase of grief around for the rest of your life. This is something all of us whose child has died will do, but you can make the suitcase so much lighter. As you clear trauma, all sudden the suitcase is lighter, and you have more energy because you’re not trying to manage triggers all day long. You’re body can finally relax because it’s not alert waiting for the next threat and shoe to drop. Then you clear up your sleep, and you finally get a restful night of sleep for the first time since your child died, and you can’t believe how tired you’ve been because you have only been sleeping 3 hours or less a night. But now, that weight of that exhaustion disappears because you’ve taken the time to process your grief and get your body and mind in a place where they can fall asleep and stay asleep peacefully without medication or stress.