By Joanna Moorhead — 2017
Julia Samuel specialises in helping people cope when a loved one dies. Joanna Moorhead finds out how we can stop feeling awkward and uncertain about death – and why we should talk honestly about grief.
Read on www.theguardian.com
CLEAR ALL
The death of a beloved is an amputation.
2
I thought I could describe a state; make a map of sorrow. Sorrow, however, turns out to be not a state but a process.
God allows us to experience the low points of life in order to teach us lessons that we could learn in no other way.
23
Mental pain is less dramatic than physical pain, but it is more common and also more hard to bear. The frequent attempt to conceal mental pain increases the burden: it is easier to say ‘My tooth is aching’ than to say ‘My heart is broken.’
4
No one ever told me that grief felt so like fear.
19
Written after his wife’s tragic death as a way of surviving the “mad midnight moment,” A Grief Observed is C.S. Lewis’s honest reflection on the fundamental issues of life, death, and faith in the midst of loss.