Please don’t tell me how to grieve.
Dealing with the end of a relationship is never easy.
No matter how rough or clean the break was, there’s still parts of you that you have to put back together. You may have certain shows you can’t watch for a while or restaurants you can’t bring yourself to eat at because those things or places are connected to your relationship. With a little time and more positive associations, you can find your way back to your fave burger joint.
But it’s different when your partner dies.
I remember reading somewhere it takes twice as long as your relationship lasted to get over their death. I’m almost twelve years out since my girlfriend was murdered, and I still miss her every day.
When your partner dies, there is no breakup. There is no, one final fight, there’s no final line that was crossed, and there’s no calm conversation in which you mutually agree that it just isn’t working. You wake up one morning and suddenly you’re… what, single? If you didn’t break up, can you be single?
It took me a while to start dating again, and when I did I ran into all kinds of issues. In addition to my own paranoia and what I’m told by doctors is likely PTSD from the experience, there’s the issue of my baggage.
I’m a firm believer that everyone brings baggage into a relationship. But at what point do you spill the beans of, “Oh, and by the way, my last partner was shot in the back of the head?” If you do it too early you risk running someone off, wait too late and you may look like you were hiding an admittedly crucial part of your past from someone important.
I straight up had friends I’d had for years come up to me and say, “I can’t be your friend right now, I can’t deal with remembering her every time I see you.”
If friends can’t handle it, how could potential partners?
I expected all of that, though. You know how heavy your own bags are. What did surprise me, was the insistence of a couple of my would-be partners that I “get over” my past relationship like it was any other breakup and I was refusing to let go of an ex. For starters, I try everyday to let go of that grief. It’s no fun to sit in a tub full of your own misery I do all the therapy and processing and facing it that I can figure out how to do. And for another thing, she’s not an ex.
My first major relationship after my partner passed lasted two years. She’d known my partner, and I thought this would make it easier–she knew exactly what I’d been through. How close we were and was there for me in the aftermath. It’s why I was genuinely confused when she met me at my office before going to a movie and saw a photo of my deceased partner next to hers on my desk. Her mouth pinched, but she didn’t say anything then. Not until after the movie when it all but exploded from her.
“I can’t believe you still have a photo of her on your desk. It’s been four years. Aren’t you over it yet?”
All I could do was gape at her.
If I hadn’t convinced her already this wasn’t something I was just going to “get over,” I wasn’t ever going to have that power. Maybe it’s something you can only understand if you’re actually going through it yourself.
You can learn to live with the pain, you can move on as I have after over a decade of self-reflection and hard work, but you never, ever get over it.
Another one I heard a lot was “time heals all wounds.” That one’s pretty much a lie. Time definitely helps, though. The wound stops bleeding after a while and scabs over. You may pick at it a few times and open up the wound again, but eventually, it scabs back over. The puckered scar stays right there, though. It’s a stain on your skin–a darker mark, reminding you of what you survived. Of what I survived.
Have you ever been affected by the loss of a loved one?
Originally written by Natalie Slaughter on SheSaid
Featured image via Photo by freddie marriage on Unsplash
When you and your partner are in conflict, nothing works better than honesty. Changing the facts to massage your point, exaggerating, or stretching your side of the story only creates a stronger reaction from the other side.