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Article
When
Someone Grieves
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All rights reserved
By Ken Chapman, Ph.D.
Ken Chapman & Associates, Inc.
We either have been or will be in the position of
comforting someone who is grieving. That is an important role played by
good friends. The most common question I hear on such occasions is,
“What should I say?” We want to help, but we feel helpless to make a
difference in the face of such tragedy.
I often remember a story told by Joseph Bayly when I struggle to say the
“right” thing to someone who is hurting. Mr. Bayly lost three children
to death over the course of several years. He wrote a book called
View From a Hearse in which he talks about his grief. He says this
about comforting those who grieve. “I was sitting, torn by grief;
someone came and talked to me of God’s healings, of why it happened, of
hope beyond the grave. He said things I knew were true. I was
unmoved except to wish he would go away. He finally did. Someone else
came and sat beside me. He didn’t talk, he didn’t ask leading
questions, he just sat with me for an hour or more, listened when I
said something, answered briefly, prayed simply, left. I was moved. I
was comforted. I hated to see him go.”
I have found Joseph Bayly’s experience to be typical of my experience.
Both of the men wanted to help. Both men cared, but only one truly
comforted. The difference was that one tried to make him feel better
while the other just let him feel. One tried to say the right things,
the other listened. One told him it would be all right, the other
shared his pain.
We cannot talk someone out of an emotion, particularly an emotion as intense
as grief. On the other hand, we can provide much healing if we are patient
enough to give others a good “listening to.”
For more information about
Ken Chapman and Associates’ Leadership Development Programs, contact Ken
Chapman at 205.366.0265 or email Ken at
kchapman@leaderscode.com.
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