Am I Paranoid, or are People Really Avoiding Me?

Grieving people often seem to be walking though quicksand and appear oblivious to the world around them. At the same time, they usually have a heightened awareness as it relates to whether or not they are being judged, evaluated, or criticized.

 

In earlier columns we have talked about the killer clichés that are not helpful to grievers. Unhelpful comments almost always encourage the griever to feel some way other than the way they feel. For example; "Don't feel sad, you should feel grateful that you had him/her for so long!"

In addition to the constant fight against the killer clichés, grievers start to experience being avoided by people they know. They notice that friends who know about the loss will not approach them or will talk without ever mentioning the loss.

The truth is that people often do avoid grievers. Since our society has so mis-educated us about loss, we are led to believe that grievers want and need to be alone. Although grievers sometimes want to be alone, they also want to talk about what has affected their lives.

Because we were never properly taught how to talk about the conflicting feelings caused by loss, we are often afraid to talk to our friends when they have experienced a loss. Therefore our own fear will cause us to avoid grievers or to avoid the subject of their loss.

Fear is one of the most common responses to loss. For example, when a spouse dies: How can I go on without them? Or, after a divorce: Where will I find another mate as wonderful, as beautiful? While fear is often the emotional response to loss, in our society, ISOLATION is frequently the behavioral reaction to that fear.

Look at the combination outlined above. People avoid grievers because they are mis-informed and afraid. Grievers avoid others because they are afraid, and then they isolate. Is anybody talking to anyone else? And if so are they talking about anything important to the griever?

As the result of the thousands of direct interactions we've had with grieving people, we can tell you that grievers want and need to talk about "what happened" and about their relationship with the person who died or to whom they were married. That does not mean that every griever will want to have a detailed conversation with every one they meet. Nor does that mean that you need to be an expert in order to talk with them.

What we are suggesting is that instead of avoiding the subject of the loss, that you at least acknowledge it. A simple comment like, "I was sorry to hear about your loss," can be very helpful to a griever who may be questioning their own sanity because no one is even mentioning their loss.

From time to time we will all be subject to the sting of loss. We will all have to address the cyclone of emotions that will threaten to capsize us, and indeed that will make us question ourselves and our emotional sanity.

The famous line, Judge Not Lest Ye Be Judged can surely be restated here:  Avoid Not Lest Ye Be Avoided - when your time comes.


By Russell Friedman

John W. James and Russell Friedman are co-founders of The Grief Recovery Institute Educational Foundation, and co-authors of The Grief Recovery Handbook and When Children Grieve, both from HarperCollins. The Institute and thousands of affiliates throughout the United States and Canada offer a variety of programs for grievers. Additional information is available by calling 888-773-2683 or on the web at www.grief.net . To view previous media related articles please go to www.grief.net/Media/MediaIndex.html . Eric Cline is Director of Canadian Operations.