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Jess Greenwood's avatar

As a former genetic counselor, one of the most helpful, honest, and I think, truly generous things I learned to say to my families is "It's okay to grieve the loss of the child and family you thought you'd have." It wasn't just permission to grieve, but an invitation to call what they were experiencing grief, even though they had a living child in front of them. I so appreciate your invitation here, to allow grief to be what it is when it is and to show up how it does, without respect to time or place. It's particularly salient at the holidays, when "happy" seems to be the only appropriate way to be. Thank you, so much, for creating space for those of us who have some other, more complicated feelings at this time of year to let those be present and true as well.

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Nancy Stordahl's avatar

Hi Jeannie,

There is no timeline for mourning indeed. Grief isn't something to get through, much less rush through within some arbitrary or self-imposed timeline. I don't ever intend to be done grieving for dear ones no longer here, including beloved pets. I don't even want to be done. Why would I? This doesn't mean I wallow or am stuck in grief. It means I keep learning to weave the losses into my very being. That's what healing means to me, and it's also how I honor those for whom I grieve.

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