As the grandparent of a grandchild in heaven I understand how difficult it can be to experience the death of a grandchild. The grandparent/grandchild relationship is a
very special one.
When a grandchild dies, a grandparent grieves. They grieve not only for their grandchild, but
also for the grief of the bereaved parents.
For
some grandparents, the hardest part is a sense of
helplessness.
They feel the pain that the child’s
parents suffer, but their own grief may also be very intense. When
a child dies, both the parents and grandparents lose a big part of their present and their future.
Grief is very individual, a bereaved grandmother can often
grieve differently than the grandfather and
this difference can sometimes create a tension between them.
This does not mean that one of them is right and the other
wrong. They are both struggling to cope with their own grief as well as supporting the rest of the family.
There is not one right way to grieve.
Knowing what usually happens in grief can help
bereaved grandparents as they grieve. It can also help them as they try to
understand their child’s grief and as healing slowly
occurs for all.
Grief is said to have several stages. However, most
bereaved grandparents do not grieve step by step.
Grief is disorderly and irrational.
At the time
of the death of a loved one, there is a protective
numbness. Even though they know that the loved
one has died, their minds want to deny it.
They may find themselves talking of the
grandchild as if the child were still alive.
The
ache in the chest can become a constant companion.
As the denial lessens, grandparents begin to feel great hurt
and frustration. This could lead to anger directed at others and at themselves.
Guilt, real or imagined, is always there with the
recurring “What ifs?” “Why didn’t I?”. As they try
to resolve their guilt feelings, anger often returns
in full force.
Grandparents may experience all of this twice, Once for the grandchild who died, and then
for the parents who have their own guilt, anger
and pain to cope with. Guilt may occur because
they live on, while the young one has died. This is not the natural order of life and can be very difficult to accept and understand.
Sometimes depression is a very real part of grief. It
may be overwhelming to bereaved grandparents
who may fear that they are going crazy. Bereaved
grandparents also worry about the emotional well being of their
grieving child.
Time is a slow healer during grief, which lasts much longer than our
society is yet to admit or understand. Many families are pressured into feeling 'normal' again, and 'get back to normality'.
Talking with those
who have had the same experience can be really useful.
Grandparents can help other grandparents in
this way by sharing experiences and helping each other to realise that what they have been feeling is totally normal. Some find help in reading about grief
and the experiences of others, particularly of
grandparents. They may be helped in dealing with
their children’s grief by reading about parental grief
itself. Some draw comfort and strength from their
religious faith, although that faith may be severely
tested.
Those
who grieve are tired much of the time.
Men may have grown up with the tradition that
men don’t cry, although they know that this is not
true in their private moments. They may feel that
they must remain composed so that they can support their wives and children in their
grief.
The family may feel that grandparents are not
grieving, although in reality they are feeling the same doubt,
guilt, anger and despair as others. Tears have
healing properties and should not be suppressed
by grandparents since they are a part of grief.
Perhaps one of the most difficult aspects of
grief is the question that grandparents/parents continually
face: Why?
Friends try to comfort with
answers but for the bereaved, no answer exists.
Bereaved grandparents and parents will be told
that they must get back to normal. But what is
now normal for them will never be the same as it
was before the child’s death. Life without that child
must go on and as healing occurs, it will.
Holidays, birthdays and anniversaries including
that of the child’s death, may be stressful times.
Allow time and space for your own emotional
needs.
There will be a deeper appreciation for
those children and grandchildren who are around.
There will be a greater understanding of others
who experience similar loss.
Many grandparents become more compassionate
because of the tragic event that has touched their
lives.
Healing will help the bereaved accept the new life which has been forced upon them.
Grief is the price we pay for loving. Grandparents
love both the dead grandchild and the grieving
parents. As they grieve and try to understand the
parents, healing will occur. Although they retain scars,
grandparents will recall the happy times they once
shared with their children and their grandchildren
and not just the tragedy and sense of loss that they
have come to know.
We all have to find our own path through grief.
But we do not have to walk it alone.
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