07/18/2023
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=675794854564975&set=a.639070831570711&type=3&mibextid=DcJ9fc
"And it is the “moving-on” that often feels so wrong to us. In some Scandinavian cultures, there is a tradition of taking a year of mourning after the death of a beloved, during which time the mourner would take a pause from participating in their duties at work and in the home, to properly honor their loved one and tend to their grief. This time was called “living in the ashes”, and the community would surround the mourning person during this time to provide support and take on the tasks they would normally do, to help in carrying the burden and allow them to focus on grieving."
This is a beautiful snippet from the community ceremony led by Summer (our Ceremony Specialist and creator of .beloved) over the weekend. It was too beautiful not to share. 🤍
"We are here together today in this intimate group because we believe that grief is a communal ritual. We are meant to hold each other up, not to carry our burdens alone; even though grief can feel like the most personal and isolating experience there is. But if you look around you, you will be looking into the eyes of people who have also lost someone they loved dearly in the last year. They are on a similar journey as you, walking with a similar gaping hole in their hearts, searching for a way to carry on. They know this feeling, that the world stopped the moment that your beloved left this earth; they know how much it hurts to see the world move on around you, when it seems to have stopped forever for you. And it is the “moving-on” that often feels so wrong to us. In some Scandinavian cultures, there is a tradition of taking a year of mourning after the death of a beloved, during which time the mourner would take a pause from participating in their duties at work and in the home, to properly honor their loved one and tend to their grief. This time was called “living in the ashes”, and the community would surround the mourning person during this time to provide support and take on the tasks they would normally do, to help in carrying the burden and allow them to focus on grieving.
Know that you are not alone here. You are in good company with others who are also
“living in the ashes”. You all know what acute grief feels like; the way it rips the ground out from under you and leaves you swirling adrift in a sea of heartache. This morning, you do not have to pretend that you are okay, or hide the heavy burden of your grief; you are in a place where your grief is welcomed, surrounded by people who are also grieving, in a quiet place that can hold your grief."
Even if you aren't gathered in a physical space like this, you are NEVER alone in your .