Whatever it
may be, the question is: how will you cope with it? Often, your response is to
just keep going. Survival instinct. You do not take the time to digest what
happened. Neither the time for sorrow. You want to stay away from it as far as
possible; you want to move on. All understandable, but in the end these
strategies are not very practical. Because your grief accumulates inside you.
Without being aware of it, those tears continue to sit deep down there inside
you somewhere. And you try - unconsciously - to keep them there. You do not
want to think about that big reservoir filled with tears. But meanwhile, it
shapes you - more than you might be conscious of.
This is how
a lot of repressed tension can be explained. You are tired and angry of keeping
back those tears. Or worse, you may even get sick from all that holding back.
Your behavior can give you clues. You may find yourself being loud or laughing
the sadness away, or complaining or perhaps closing yourself off. Each of these
is a form of repression. If you can recognize these behaviors, you can also
begin processing them, to recognize what is going on. And to face reality:
"This is my life. And it's not like I hoped." And then, embrace it:
"But it's my life, it’s happening to me. And there is only one who can
make some of it. And that’s me.” To create the passage to a happier life, where
there is always something going on, where the odds can be in your favor or
against you. Where you can laugh and cry. And where your tears may flow. Simply
because they are part of life.
Dare to
feel. I find it scary. But there is a reward. What I have noticed is that tears
of happiness come easier if my tears of sadness are allowed to be present as
well. I get moved when I feel what someone can mean to me. Or I tear up when
something really hits me. That can almost hurt - in my heart. But I don’t let
it get to me. My heart will simply have to get used to feeling something, and
to the fact I’m OK with that. Perhaps it is the salvation of my heart. And
ultimately, MY salvation. If only I dare to feel.