by Getupngo » Thu Feb 18, 2010 12:24 pm
Thank you all for your support of me -- anger and all -- as I work through this.
After I lost my DH, I began to realize the "woulda-coulda-shoulda" stuff is what I now call "reverse bargaining." Bargaining is one of the stages of grief, but most of us think of it as a prayer that goes like this; "If you let so-and-so live, I'll do X-Y-and-Z." But when death is sudden and unexpected, I think the "woulda-coulda-shoulda" gave me an imaginary of grasp on power when I was most powerless. That perhaps I have power if I could have stopped "X" if only I had done "Y." Delusional? Yes. Normal. Also, yes.
There was another thing that I realized a year and a half after my husband died. For those of you who are new here, my DH was killed five years ago by his psychotic son. I became that young man's advocate during the criminal proceedings, saying that I was doing for Ben what Jim would have done if Ben had killed ME. One of my friends, tired of listening to that, finally said, "Janice, that is not the corollary. The corollary would be, 'What would Jim have done if Mike (MY son) had killed YOU?'"
That stopped me dead in my tracks. I didn't KNOW what Jim would have done if it was MY son, not his. And I realized that particular delusion was just another way for me not to let Jim be dead. I had to let Jim be dead. So I dropped his mantle. I still continued to believe Ben needed to be hospitalized, not imprisoned, and advocated for him as the victim's widow.
The human mind is a tricky thing, and I believe there are no "incorrect" emotions following a death. They can, however, be carried to self- and other-destructive extremes.
Janice traveling solo in a 2008 Four Winds Windsport
Navigator: Annie the miniature poodle
2011 Honda CRV toad