Two
classic works on grief are A
Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis and John Gunther’s Death
Be Not Proud. Lewis was writing about the death of his wife, Joy
Davidman Lewis; Gunther was writing about the death of his 17-year-old son from
a brain tumor. Only the Lewis work is well known today, largely because Lewis
is still well known today. (Lewis died in 1963 and Gunther, a well know
journalist and author, in 1970.)
Lewis
wrote from the perspective of faith, although a shaken one. Gunther write from
a human, non-faith perspective. Both convey the depth of the pain and loss each
man experienced.
The
loss that prompts grief is always hard. Lewis moved in the direction of the
idea of loss as grace; joy herself seems to have gotten there before he did.
But loss and the grief it prompts are the measure of the love and feeling we
have for the one who dies.
Grieving
Grace
by Douglas Spurling, a writer and blogger (Spurling Silver), fully embraces
the idea of loss as grace. It is a small book with a large theme, prompted by
the death of his mother-in-law Mary. The mother of 14 and grandmother of 100+,
Mary died at 87. What Spurling has done here is essentially to keep a family
journal of her last days, yet raise questions that apply to all of us.
In
addition to chronicling her physical decline, Spurling asks probing and
sometimes unexpected questions, such as how do you tell a loved one they’re
dying? What is the withdrawal from this life actually like? What
characteristics are common to the dying? What are the final days and hours
like?
This
is a work about dying, grieving, and loss, but it is also a work about love. It
takes love – a lot of it – to tell someone it’s okay to let go, to move from
this physical life we know to the life we don’t know but can only guess at and
hope for, really.
Grieving
Grace is a private journal written for the large extended family that is Mary’s.
But it surpasses that,a nd becomes a record of dying, grief, and grace for all
of us.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
5 comments:
Glynn, thank-you.Speechless & humbled here."...but it is also a work about love." That describes the work you do, everyday.
I'm not sure now I missed this, but sir Doug surely has a good 'n godly handle on the telling of God's love.
Blessings.
*(hat-tip, head nod to ya both)
A book that I haven't read yet, so thanks for the great recommendation. I'm always looking for something new to read.
I wasn't aware of his book. Yes, he is a fine writer and no doubt this is book reflects that. And what a topic that we still don't have a clue about
I love "A Grief Observed." Haven't read the others. Although I highly recommend Joan Didion's "The Year of Magical Thinking." It really helped me understand what was happening to me, especially in those early stages of grief.
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