I am in a situation where this confrontation of mortality has become every day.
My husband died suddenly last year. We have two daughters who are below 16.
I struggle very much with the absolute disappearance of a loud and energetic person who has been central to my existence for thirty years and whom I fully expected to be central until the end.
Watching my daughters navigate their pain, shock and fear is appalling and makes me furious that I cannot solve it for them.
I sat on the floor of the kitchen last night with my brave, funny daughter sobbing and begging for her dad back.
For myself, I have found there is some comfort to be found in the way you frame it.
I listened to a book recently that said seeing it as ‘our grief’ rather than ‘my grief’ helps.
As in the world’s grief, we are all part of this cycle of life that arises and then ends. The bittersweet fact is that we will all face tragedy and loss and the risk of loving is losing.
I think the reason this helps is that grief is utterly lonely.
If we can look at death and say ‘yes, this will be me and will be all’ we are part of a larger system rather than a personal tragedy to be feared and looked away from.
I also acknowledge how lucky I have been and ,with total respect, how lucky you are.
Your post talks about older relatives beginning to leave. We are immeasurably blessed to confront mortality in this way.
I watch my young daughters face death and gain unfortunate wisdom that many adults do not know.
For me, the calm I can find is because I have not looked away or pretended.
I have found much comfort from books about death.
I agree with living to the full and and seizing the day, I also would suggest humour and actually actually laughing at our lack of control can help.
Seizing the day does not have to be large things, I think it’s more about getting out of your head and seeing the absolute beauty around us in the ordinary things. In feeling our own life force and enjoying our bodies.
Loving our people and making sure they know.
In acknowledging our lack of control and skipping forward anyway or maybe because we know it is temporary