Parenting After a Loss

Parenting After a Loss Past child related loss typically influences how you parent your surviving children.

I can assist you in understanding these challenges and help you change ineffective parenting choices using new and better strategies.

12/25/2022

May your hearts be held tenderly as you miss them.

May your grief be honored and seen.

May the compassion you receive buoy your spirit and help you bear the the unbearable.

Gentle holiday wishes to you all.

07/04/2022

I am a mother. I am a bereaved mother.
My child died, and this is my reluctant path.
It is not a path of my choice, but it is a path I must walk mindfully and with intention.
It is a journey through the darkest night of my soul and it will take time to wind through the places that scare me.

Every cell in my body aches and longs to be with my beloved child. On days when grief is loud, I may be impatient, distracted, frustrated, and unfocused.

I may get angry more easily, or I may seem hopeless. I will shed many, many, many tears.

I won’t smile as often as my old self. Smiling hurts now. Most everything hurts some days, even breathing.

But please, just sit beside me.
Say nothing.
Do not offer a cure.
Or a pill, or a word, or a potion.

Witness my suffering.
Don’t turn away from me.
Please be gentle with me.

And I will try to be gentle with me too.
I will not ever "get over" my child's death so please don’t urge me down that path.

Even on days when grief is quiescent, when it isn't standing loudly in the foreground, even on days when I am even able to smile again, the pain is just beneath the surface.

There are days when I still feel paralyzed. My chest feels the sinking weight of my child's absence and, sometimes, I feel as if I will explode from the grief.

Losing my child affects me in so many ways: as a woman, a mother, a human being. It affects every aspect of me: spiritually, physically, mentally, and emotionally. There are days when I barely recognize myself in the mirror anymore.

Grief is as personal to me as my fingerprint. Don't tell me how I should or shouldn’t be grieving or that I should or shouldn’t “feel better by now.” Don't tell me what's right or wrong. I'm doing it my way, in my time. If I am to survive this, I must do what is best for me.

My understanding of life will change and a different meaning of life will slowly evolve.

What I knew to be true or absolute or real or fair about the world has been challenged so I'm finding my way, moment-to-moment in this new place.

Things that once seemed important to me are barely thoughts any longer. I notice life's suffering more- hungry children, the homeless and the destitute, a mother’s harsh voice toward her young child- or an elderly person struggling with the door.

There are so many things about the world which I now struggle to understand: Why do children die? There are some questions, I've learned, which are simply unanswerable.

So please don’t tell me that “ God has a plan ” for me. This, my friend, is between me and my God. Those platitudes slip far too easily from the mouths of those who tuck their own child into a safe, warm bed at night: Can you begin to imagine your own child, flesh of your flesh, lying lifeless in a casket, when “goodbye” means you’ll never see them on this Earth again?

Grieving mothers- and fathers- and grandparents- and siblings won’t wake up one day with everything ’okay’ and life back to normal. I have a new normal now.

As time passes, I may gain gifts, and treasures, and insights but anything gained was too high a cost when compared to what was lost.

Perhaps, one day, when I am very, very old, I will say that time has truly helped to heal my broken heart. But always remember that not a second of any minute of any hour of any day passes when I am not aware of the presence of my child's absence, no matter how many years lurk over my shoulder, don’t forget that I have another one, another child, whose absence, like the sky, is spread over everything as C.S. Lewis said ...
“My child may have died; but my love - and my motherhood - never will.”

Beautifully written by Dr. Joanne Cacciatore ❤️

07/16/2021

It’s always the right time to honor the child you lost.

05/09/2021

Mother.
Mater.
Madre.
Maman.
Ina.
Maji.
Mam.
Mana.
Mor.
Ammee.
Muter.
Makuahine.
Mamma.

In every language, the word mother is beautiful. At its best, it represents a relationship of warmth, safety, and truly unconditional love and devotion. Sometimes, the beauty of motherhood is marked by the tragedy of death. And when this happens, when our hearts are broken, marred by the kind of terrifying loss that brings us to our knees, the truth of motherhood can feel overshadowed by anguish.

Back behind that shadow is the truth of mothers. That is, that motherhood is holy. That death can take away the body but it has no power over love and devotion. That our connection to them, the one that transcends time and space, is untouchable.

You are a mother. You are a beautiful mother, in every language, in every country, in every village, in every family. This day is as much yours as any mother, or perhaps more so.

May we see each other, we beautiful mothers with aching hearts and longing bones. May we see each other's children, each other's grief, each other's love.

Because that’s what mothers do. They love fiercely and ceaselessly. And Mother’s Day belongs to you.

Tender Mother’s Day love to each of you as you miss them dearly.

_____

And, friends and family, please remember to honor mothers who have lost their beloved child/children.

Please remember to honor the beloved mothers who have died and are now mourned by their children.

Please.

www.JoanneCacciatore.com

Hiking after a miscarriage, grief walks with me.
04/10/2021

Hiking after a miscarriage, grief walks with me.

How hiking L.A. trails helped Kiana Butler find love and cope with loss after miscarriage.

03/13/2021

Opportunities for light shining through the darkness.

07/28/2020

"You know there's a theory about her smile. Want to hear it?"
"Yes please," I said.
"Mona Lisa and her husband lost a baby. Sometime later, her husband commissioned this painting from da Vinci to celebrate the birth of another baby. Mona Lisa sat for Leonardo to paint her, but she wouldn't smile during the sitting. Not all the way. The story goes that da Vinci wanted her to smile wider, but she refused. She did not want the joy she felt for her new baby to erase the pain she felt from losing the first. There in her half smile is her half joy. Or maybe it's her full joy and her full grief all at the same time. She has the look of a woman who has just realized a dream but still carries the lost dream inside her. She wanted her whole life to be present on her face. She wanted everyone to remember, so she wouldn't pretend."
Now I understand what the fuss is all about. Mona Lisa is the patron saint of honest, resolute, fully human women- women who feel and who know. She is saying for us:
Don’t tell me to smile.
I will not be pleasant.
Even trapped here, inside two dimensions, you will see the truth.
You will see my life’s brutal and beautiful right here on my face.
The world will not be able to stop staring.
- excerpt from UNTAMED,

A day to be gentle with yourself.
05/10/2020

A day to be gentle with yourself.

I feel for those who are experiencing loneliness during this time of needing to maintain physical distancing. I found th...
04/24/2020

I feel for those who are experiencing loneliness during this time of needing to maintain physical distancing. I found this podcast particularly inspiring. Former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy on ways to help overcome loneliness.
Together the hidden power of connection - “One of the greatest gifts that we can give another person is the gift of our full attention... Simply showing up and listening can be an extraordinarily powerful experience. All we need to bring to these opportunities to serve are an open mind, a full heart and a desire to truly, honestly and openly connect with another human being."

On a side note, he’s got such a mellifluous voice. Truly a soothing listen.

‎Show Hidden Brain, Ep A Social Prescription - Apr 20, 2020

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