When Grief and Coronavirus Collide: AfterTalk Pandemic Weekly

When Grief and Coronavirus Collide

BY MARY JANE HURLEY BRANT

When Grief and the Coronavirus (COVID-19) collide, we feel like we’ll collapse. The Coronavirus is not only serious, it’s a pandemic. Like grief, COVID-19 is powerful, persistent and painful; it makes us fearful. Grief has already made us more vulnerable so this is a rough combination. Today, let’s consider what this fear-reality looks like to our brains; how it makes our bodies feel; and the way it affects our emotions.

Firstwhat is fear when coupled with grief?  How does it look and feel? 

Unlike fruit on a tree, fear is not visible. Fear is more like a threat, an internal force that feels as though something dangerous is happening or about to happen. Our bodies rev up as our broken hearts thump in our ears, our chests, or both. Our limbs feel weak and rubbery; maybe we’re a bit dizzy and we feel even weepier. Our inhalations and exhalations are shallower.  Combined now with our grief they are more frequent. There’s also a constant lump in our throats and it’s all too much to swallow.  “Is this a heart attack or a panic attack?” we ask ourselves.

Secondwhat does fear – on top of grief – cause us to do?

Sometimes, we might lash out at small provocations. The fear may possess us to think we’ll lose our jobs, our 401K’s, our homes, and our businesses. Our grief causes us to think we might even lose our minds. But, understand that fear is, in warranted circumstances, quite necessary.  It is the “fight or flight” emotional response, a primal unconscious reaction to an immediate and alarming situation.

We feel compelled to respond because there’s an internal pressure deep within a part of our brain (the temporal lobe) where the amygdala resides. This amygdala sends out a signal for the “fight or flight” stress response. Thanks to neuroscientists, we now have a wealth of data about the amygdala’s powerful sensitivity and its formidable capacity for storing old trauma.  For example, PTSD from soldiers’ Military experiences and other horrific and traumatic life circumstances – like death of a loved one – are stored there in the amygdala. So, these stored traumatic memories can be instantly aroused by frightening stimuli in a present-day circumstance (think the COVID-19).  These scary times tap into our abiding grief thus making our reactions even more intense.

Thirdwhat is our reaction?

coronavirus and grief AfterTalkSometimes people react by becoming hyper-vigilant and worry – nonstop. If the situation seems even vaguely (unconsciously) familiar to a previous real situation (like the loss one is living with) it can feel paralyzing.  We feel over-whelmed. (If one has a mental health diagnosis like OCD or Bi-Polar Disorder or suffers from depression or anxiety it could be even more terrifying to manage the COVID19 and our grief.  I would suggest staying close to your therapist or doctor here, no reason to suffer even more if they can offer additional help.)

 

Sometimes people respond in the opposite direction: they diminish or deny there even is a crisis.  That’s not a healthy response during this pandemic. So, to better serve the combination or grief and the Coronavirus, here are a few more concrete tools to manage both Coronavirus fear and grief when they collide.

Step One: Be proactive and stay calm. I know this sounds easy to do but be assured of the benefits these behaviors offer. Clinical studies show us how calm people really do make better decisions.  So, during this pandemic, reduce your TV viewing, modify your internet browsing, and be mindful of your excessive phone checking. (This is especially important if you find yourself unable to sleep or function.)  Also, draw on facts about what people did in previous periods of history to survive plagues and wars, diseases, deaths, and natural disasters.

Step Two:  Social distancing and curbing your desires to touch, kiss and hug. Practice vigilant and frequent hand washing, covering one’s mouth when sneezing, yawning, coughing, nose-blowing. Don’t touch your own face, eyes, nose and mouth, especially. These are behaviors and habits and when practiced will become easier to remember. Wave to your neighbors from your porch or deck and offer small pleasantries, “How’s your family managing?”  Send a text, card or email to your First Responders: local fire department, police coronavirus and grief AfterTalkdepartment, Emergency Medical Service and First Aid Squads. Don’t forget physicians, nurses and medical personnel. Are these helpers present on Facebook? Cheer them on; these people are heroic in their efforts during an emergency especially. Don’t forget your local spiritual people, nuns, priests, ministers and rabbis; they need support, too.  Remember your local businesses in any way possible; their stress level is monumental and undeniable. When you help someone else, even in a small way, you will contribute to easing their struggles.  Plus, it will make you feel better and keep your mind focusing on other issues other than your grief and your fear. 

Step Three: Recognize that most people don’t like confinement so practice patience and tolerance for your own family members’ eccentricities. This is a biggie; they are yours and you are theirs.  Maybe you have a family member who shuts down when stressed-out and sad and others become super-vigilant and chatter constantly. Remember, they are grieving in their own way and have their own set of fears. Help them by loving them, listening to them, or distracting them.  Also, laugh at some of the weird things we all do and at your own behavior, too!  Remember laughter lowers stress, raises endorphin levels, and makes us feel hopeful.  And, don’t forget, never allow yourself to feel guilty for smiling or laughing while you are mourning.  The person you love and miss would want that for you; he or she doesn’t want you to suffer anymore than your are and, I know that you are in pain, because I suffer with personal losses and am vigilant by nature so fear is tapping on my door-of-sorrow, too.

I also strongly recommend that we all talk openly about our feelings. Yes! Stretch that communication muscle! For example, of course you miss your loved one and are so lonely for them. Self-quarantining can slam against our hearts even more with sadness whether recent or long ago.  Loneliness is a searing pain and we miss circumstances attached to them (whether deceased or self-isolating) like driving a parent to the store or having our grandchildren for an overnight. “I can’t believe my child is no longer with me on this earth” I hear several times a week from bereaved parents.  It breaks my heart for them and for myself.  “When will this pandemic be over?” we ask one another. Will things ever be normal and I’ll take grandchild to the movies? Yes, it will end.  Pandemics end and grief will become softer around the edges.

Living with the unknown is difficult and anxiety-inducing.  But remember, my friends, much of the pain we carry in our hearts is universal.  I believe that universality is a peaceful place where we can all be united; all can be supportive; all can be one. It’s a great hope I hold onto and maybe you can hold onto it, too.

In closing, here’s a phrase of mine that eases some of my fear and pain and relaxes my nervous system. Maybe my mantra will help your fear and your pain, too.  It’s from the fourteenth-century English mystic, Julian of Norwich, who said, “All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.”  May we all be well.  I believe we shall.

 

VISIT MARY JANE HURLEY BRANT’S WEBSITE AT http://maryjanebrant.squarespace.com/ 

 

Every Wednesday we will be publishing Pandemic Weekly for, we hope, not too long. We invite you to submit your thoughts, essays, poems or songs. Please send to info@aftertalk.com.

 

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