My sisters have several friends in the process of losing parents. We know we are not the only ones.
I am going to sound a little mean about this one.
As much as I acknowledge that life is hard in general, some people do have it easier. One aspect of that may be not having to work.
I also acknowledge that a lot of jobs should have better leave policies and backups in place, especially for illness.
Regardless, if one particular person is a bit more self-absorbed, more demanding of support and sympathy, and also takes a lot of time off work and has more money in the family background... I suspect those things going together is not a coincidence.
Anyway, when asked how she was doing, she said that her therapist said she was "consumed with grief."
That sounds bad, but it is also a luxury and probably not really good for her.
Yesterday I mentioned realizing that the cumulative grief that keeps welling up is probably a product of grief I have put to the side while doing other things.
It's not that I never felt any of it, and it's not that there aren't some issues with putting it to the side... I don't think I have been as balanced as I should be.
That being said, I think it is good to have things to do.
It is possible that part of my current crying jags is that it is easier to lose concentration on schoolwork than on a job, though that's questionable too.
I would say that my being in school instead of having a job is the reason why I am making the phone calls and things, but based on past history there is a good chance I'd have been the one doing a lot of that anyway. Is our family perfectly balanced? No. I am not sure if we are worse than other families, but no.
I still see some advantage to us in that we have to rally ourselves and keep going, over and over again.
I like that about us, but I also see the downside. One point Pauline Boss made in The Myth of Closure is that we can't have resilience be the solution for social ills that we could prevent.
Children can be resilient, it is true, but that does not mean that experiencing hunger or homelessness is good for them, especially if we start looking at research into Adverse Childhood Experiences.
I am grateful to be in school right now, and that I have some control over my schedule.
I am also grateful that I have to report to my mentor weekly and to my Employment Department person every two weeks. That makes a difference.
I am grateful to have a sense of responsibility that was developed over the years and does relate at least partially to hardships.
I am also fortunate to live with people who do have jobs; I would feel some shame if I wallowed too much. Also we have the same heartache going on and can commiserate about it.
Frankly, some extra money would solve a lot of our issues, and it would be great if that were an option.
For now, we are getting by.
Related posts:
https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2015/03/is-that-what-was-happening.html
https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2025/12/dealing-with-ambiguity.html