Yesterday while driving down to Vineyard Haven I tuned into one of my favorite NPR radio talk shows. Tom Ashbrook’s topic was grief, grieving and comeback.
Yesterday while driving down to Vine yard Haven I tuned into one of my favorite NPR radio talk shows. Tom Ashbrook’s topic was grief, grieving and comeback. His guests were a renowned rabbi and a therapist who specializes in loss. Tom‘s wife died two months ago and when he describes his marriage, it’s storybook. He asks us, the listeners, to call in and share our experiences, but most of all he’s looking for a road map to heal. He wants advice to help him negotiate his pain.
I’m an expert on grief. I’ll call in, I think.
The rabbi says it’s not over until it’s over. I begin sort of rehearsing what I will say if I do get on. Tom, I’m so moved by the fact that you would tell your own story and be so vulnerable live on the air! You, who are supposed to be the host, and here you are being a person.
One woman calls in and says you’re lucky your relationship was so beautiful. Most people never find that kind of love.
Tom says, yes, but it’s gone.
Another woman calls and says, you’re linked forever. You’ll always be linked just in a different form.
But she’s not here, Tom says.
These are not road maps. They are like saying, I know just how you feel. Or you’ll get over it in time. Or she’s in a better place.
I’ve entered West Tisbury and I’m dialing on my cell phone. The line is busy. I’ve already scrapped what I had planned to say. Now I don’t know what words to use but I know they will come, my being the expert and all.
Then the rabbi says touch. That’s what people need. To be touched. He shares a story about the wise man in the village who goes to the home of someone who has just lost her baby. The wise man sits in the corner and says nothing. After about an hour he gets up and hugs the young mother and he leaves. There it is. That was as good advice as anything I could have come up with. I guess I don’t need to call.
But then the psychologist says men have trouble letting out their emotions. She talks about how many male and even some female clients she has who can’t cry. And now again I want to call and tell him to sob. I will tell him there are toxins in tears. So cry it out Tom, I will say. Cry, sob, wail, pound the dashboard of your car, get on all fours on the floor and scream why. It’s not exactly what I did when I lost my son but it’s good sound advice for Tom.
Yup, I think I better call.
Then the rabbi says people go into shock. Some people feel nothing.
Even though my son Dan was sick for so long and I knew he was going to die I never ever ever ever ever ever really believed it. So when it actually happened I went numb. And now for the first time here on the radio I am hearing a description of me.
No, I will not call. I have no words. I don’t know how anyone feels. He’s not in a better place. Everyone grieves differently. I am no expert. And the rabbi’s right. It’s not over until it’s over.
Nancy Slonim Aronie is the author of Writing from the Heart. She is a commentator for National Public Radio’s All Things Considered and founder of the Chilmark Writing Workshop.

Comments
My heart stills swells with
Eileen Leonard Circle VHMy heart stills swells with love (and grief) when I think of Danzer or pass what will always be Dan's house to us. Nancala, I am still sitting quietly in your corner, sending love and hugs when you need them.
Such a beautiful commentary
Carol Atlanta and EdgartownSuch a beautiful commentary to start my day with, Nancy. Your writing from your heart touches my heart very deeply this morning. Thank you.
Over six years after the
Debra New Haven, CTOver six years after the sudden loss of the man I love, I find that grief is never over,,,never completely gone. It takes new shapes, finds different outlets, and, eventually, seems to find a home in your heart. It lurks there quietly most of the time. But then come the moments, or the days, where it overwhelms, as forceful as ever, without warning. I've come to accept grief, and the pain it carries, as a reminder that love never dies.
Oh, Nancy! So beautifully and
Linda Lawrenceville, NJOh, Nancy! So beautifully and perfectly expressed. Why am I not surprised?
Thank you for this essay. My
Nathalie Borozny PhiladelphiaThank you for this essay. My daughter , a few months short of forty nine, died of a massive stroke four years ago leaving her sons, her husband and her family plunged into unimaginable grief. "Recovery can seem like a betrayal" is party of an essay by Hilary Mantel published in the Guardian. It is a painfully beautiful piece.
I think Rose Kennedy , our
Sus western MAI think Rose Kennedy , our mind trying to maintain sanity covers the wound of grief with scar tissue, but the wound never heals. I think that's so very true....we all carry it differently. But life as we knew it, is never the same. A realization that (sadly) we all must experience.
Such a touching article....thank you.
As a minister, I, too,
Cynthia Hubbard Plymouth and ChappaquiddickAs a minister, I, too, thought I was the expert when my Mother was diagnosed with a particularly fast moving and lethal leukemia. How wrong I was! First I had to be the grieving daughter. Then, and only then, could I journey with her through the dying process. And yes, we all grieve differently and we really don't know what it is like to be in another's shoes. A very honest, touching and vulnerable article.
Wonderful article. Thank you
Barbara South ShoreWonderful article. Thank you.
We are traveling a path which
Pamela Jacqueline Friedman Long Island New YorkWe are traveling a path which diverges from one another, and yet Connected, uniquely moved by "Grief". There is no regulation manual for human emotion - The unspoken vocabulary of "Sorrow". ( With "Hope" of offering some sustanance and nourishment !- Earl A. Grollman, "Living When A Loved One Has Died")
My brother's beloved wife of
Karen East Hartland, CtMy brother's beloved wife of 10 years was just killed in a car accident. They had ae fairy tale love story. Its only been 3 weeks, it is heartbreaking and humbling. No one can know what goes on in his broken heart, but we love and cherish his beauitful wife and the unconditional love they had for eachother. I appreciate so much your thoughtful and honest story. There is no right way to grieve. God Bless
Nancy,
Brad Woodger ChappyNancy,
You may not have called...but you're message was received. Thank you
Beautifully expressed. Thank
Amanda Phillips VermontBeautifully expressed. Thank you for articulating this. I feel I never have the words. You remind me of the power of just holding the grieving.
I heard somewhere that life
Rajka EdgartownI heard somewhere that life and death are binaries. Life feeds on death and death feeds on life, and it is eternal circle, for ever and ever. Abstractly speaking I accept the idea, even admire the brains who thought about it. Both life and death are the core of our being. Accepted. However when someone is dying, what do we do? We try to hang on to life, desperately and do everything in our power to keep our loved ones with us.
This is the time of year in
FAE KONTJE-GIBBS VINEYARD HAVENNThis is the time of year in which Dan slipped out of his body. Witnessing the grace with which he navigated that stony path from material to non-material life continues to change my life. He used to say "why don't I ever get any better?" Today I am, hopefully, at the end of a tummy bug. It has been miserable. And today I thought of Dan, never getting better. He learned to live with humor and love even with everything relentlessly falling down around his ears. And when it was time, he patiently found the door that let him out of his crippled frame. It gives me courage and a perspective that stands me upright to remember Dan when I feel like whining. I hear his voice telling me to "slow down turbo." Your son, Nancy. He learned it from you and Joel. He knew above and beyond all else, he was a star. Like his mama. Love you all ways. Thank you for saying it all out loud.
Fae,
Martha MageeFae,
I love what you wrote. It felt like a love bath. All true.
In the beginning was the word
and the word was with God
and the word WAS GOD
I LOVE YOU ALL
Dear Nancy, You have found
D'Arcy Wayne, PADear Nancy, You have found just the right words here - how beautifully expressed and heart-opening! Hugs and love, and many thanks, to you.
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