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Life's Next Chapter Coaching

  • Home
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    • About Carrie
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  • Services
    • Nine Step Program
    • Bereavement
    • Divorce
    • Grief at Work
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    • Workshops and Seminars
  • Online Courses
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How to Find the Gifts in your Grief

Articles

Navigating Through Emotional Storms

November 21, 2013 Carrie Doubts
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“Anger is like a storm rising up from the bottom of your consciousness.”

Thich Nhat Hanh

We all have our emotional ups and downs – highs and lows, peaks and valleys. And, when you are dealing with loss and grief, it seems like you get to spend a lot of time in the valleys. Not everyone experiences anger as part of their grieving processes, but many do, and part of what is distressing is that your anger can come out of nowhere when you least expect it. It can be upsetting to feel anger towards yourself, the person who left, the doctors, the courts, at God even. Know that anger is a normal and understandable emotion at this time, because of the extreme stress you are dealing with. 

Underneath it all is pain and a sense of a loss of control. Nothing is as it should be. It’s as though a typhoon has blown through your consciousness and you know your life will never be the same again. You didn’t ask for this.

 Sadness is certainly expected and even tolerated by others more easily than anger. Society tells us that anger is not OK. We internalize this by telling ourselves we shouldn’t feel this way. You may have even had your friends and family tell you that you need to see a therapist, or maybe you start receiving pamphlets about “anger management” workshops. Your loved ones may not be prepared for dealing with your expressions of anger. It’s a difficult situation for everyone. So then, you might try to suppress, mask, avoid, push away, deny the feelings. And what do you think happens next? Do the feelings go away just because you will it so?

There is research that bereaved spouses have a 66% chance of dying in the three months after their partner's death, according to Harvard researchers. According to the Heart Foundation, intense emotion and stress have been clearly linked with heart attack risk and a condition known as stress cardiomyopathy. A lot of people will tell you that there is a direct link between suppressed emotional material and somatic illness. Anger is catabolic, destructive energy and energy cannot be destroyed. This energy can be shifted into higher levels of coping, forgiveness, compassion, and ultimately acceptance, wisdom, peace, and unconditional loving. The first step to shifting the energy is giving the feelings of anger full expression. If you deny yourself the permission to express and release your anger, the energy will express itself, often in terms of illness.

We tend to be scared of strong emotions, that we will “lose it” and dump all that negativity on others and ruin the relationships we still have. If you are trying to suppress your anger, you may have been at the receiving end of another’s anger, perhaps as a child, and vowed never to do that to anyone else. It’s hurtful and ugly to see someone blow up and direct that energy at you.

 I will tell you what I know to be true from my personal and professional experience. My mind and my emotions are only part of who I am. When I express EVERYTHING that is in my mind, in my heart, without holding back any of the scary, dark things that are in there, when I let it all come up and out, I move into the experience of reconciliation, forgiveness, and acceptance. When I express how I feel, I can see clearly that it is not the truth of who I am. I then have access to my inner sanctuary of peace and loving.

I am thinking of a lighthouse, the way it represents our inner strength. It is built at the highest point of land where it meets the sea, and its purpose is to warn sailors of the dangers of the rocks at its feet. It shines a beacon of light to guide us away from that which would destroy us (choices that don’t serve us). It is built to withstand the storms of wind (thoughts) and water (emotions) and shines a light (spiritual and emotional guidance) to bring us safely home. It steers us into the calm waters of the safe harbor. The message of the lighthouse is, regardless of how turbulent our thoughts and emotional seas may become, we need only focus on the guiding light of the Spirit within us in order to navigate to the inner peace and tranquility of our safe harbor.

This is the power of prayer. Who is the one that hears me and comforts me through it all? Who is the one that has faith in me when I don’t have faith myself?

God is. God is all of it: that lighthouse in the storm and the safe harbor to rest in when the storm has passed. Faith is so important when you are grieving – to have faith in God and faith in yourself, to trust the Light to bring you home. Faith is what I choose when I am on my knees. Knowing that God is my partner will outlast fear, anger, depression, wanting to give up, any of the storms that blow in to try to steer me off my course. I have trust in God, and faith in my trust of God. As scary as these storms seem to be, they cannot destroy me if I am following the guidance I receive from the Light within.

What can you do if you feel that you have lost that faith, or never had it to begin with? Well, there is psychology. We can learn how to appropriately express ALL of our feelings. There is no feeling so bad or wrong that it cannot be released in positive and therapeutic ways.

Here are a few ways I recommend to express strong and explosive emotions:

  • Journaling*
  • Talking it out with someone you trust
  • Prayer

 *See my blog Finding Solace in Writing for more information about this.

Also, some activities for moving the emotional energy of anger up and out of your body are:

  • Screaming in the shower, the car, into a pillow
  • Doing vigorous exercise
  • Dancing or moving to loud, powerful music
  • Pulling weeds, raking, working in the soil
  • Playing sports that involve hitting a ball – baseball, tennis, golf

Here’s what you DON’T want to do: Dump your anger on others or indulge in other expressions of anger that are destructive and/or violent. Also, you don’t want to repress or suppress feelings of anger because this will turn it inward, which destroys your health and your inner peace. The key is expression within the bounds of safety.

Having faith that you have feelings but you are not your feelings is the key to giving yourself the space to release and heal on your way to wholeness.

Love and Blessings on Your Journey,

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In Grief, Spirituality Tags Anger, healing grief, Anger management, Stress relief, Understanding grief, grief recovery tools, loss of partner, Emotional reactivity, Personal Growth
← The Power of ChoiceFinding Solace Through Writing →
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