Since my daughter Alison died almost three years ago,
aged seven, I have felt many emotions, but one is almost
always with me – anger. Sometimes the rage is
so strong I just don’t know what to do with it.
Other times it just simmers, surfacing when someone
says something stupid or thoughtless.
Alison died of myocarditis, so essentially there is
no-one to blame. So of course my first target was the
medical team at the hospital’s emergency room
– how dare they call themselves competent professionals
when they let her die! An autopsy was performed –
my second target was the pathologist, who treated her
body with such disrespect.
From there my anger grew, taking in God, parents who
did it wrong, people whose comments were thoughtless
or inappropriate, almost anyone – up to and including
the makers of TV ads! Finally after two incidents where
I screamed at total strangers in public over minor incidents,
I sought help. By this stage I thought I was going crazy.
The therapist I saw was helpful. I realised that my
anger was normal, that I was angry with everyone because
I didn’t have a specific target, and she got me
to write (but not to send) hate letters to the pathologist
for example. I went to a grief recovery course. I read
everything I could find out about death, grief, mourning,
loss etc. My boiling anger reduced to a slow simmer.
I don’t think I’ll ever rid myself of this
anger entirely. It only takes one little thing and it
bubbles up again. Someone makes the trite comment “They
grow up so quickly don’t they?” and I feel
like snapping “No, not all of them”, but
instead I put on a smile, remember that I’m dealing
with a thoughtless idiot, and let it pass. When a neighbour
said, shortly after Alison’s death “never
mind dear, you’re young enough to have another”,
I didn’t punch her in the mouth or scream “How
dare you talk about my daughter as if she were a bald
tyre to be replaced: but I felt like it.
I think it is normal to be angry when you’ve
been robbed. Bob and I have been robbed of the daughter
we thought was ours to love and guide through the years.
Peter has been robbed of his sister. But most of all
Alison has been robbed of all the years she should have
lived, all the experiences life has to offer. All gone
because of a stupid virus.
The little everyday things are the most painful for
me now. Going shopping and seeing something she would
have liked, and not being able to buy it for her. Seeing
her friends going to gym, or netball or swimming and
knowing that she never will, hearing people complain
that their kids fight all the time and thinking I’d
give anything for her to be here fighting with Peter.
Hundreds of little incidents make me think of her, and
along with pain and loss and sadness, there is anger.
The Compassionate Friends has been a huge help. To
be able to discuss subjects my family and friends just
don’t want to hear in a supportive, non-judgemental
group has been an enormous relief. I (like everyone
else) didn’t know what to expect at the first
meeting. I didn’t want to be part of a group of
bereaved parents (who in the world does?) and some things
were a shock to me. For example, some people could actually
laugh together. What kind of sickos were these people
– their child was dead and they were laughing?
And they could about unrelated subjects, how did they
manage it? I felt like I had no skin I was so raw and
wounded. It was a slow process to realise that grief
has many faces and normal is only one of them.
So that is why I wanted to write this for the newsletter.
I hope it will help those whose grief is newer than
mine to feel normal when their anger overwhelms them.
This is healthy, not a sign of “lost marbles”.
And for women in particular it is difficult to deal
with – rage is so unladylike! I’m so glad
that Compassionate Friends was there when I needed it,
I’m
grateful to all the wonderful people I’ve met.
I just wish I’d met them for a different reason.
Written by
Ann, TCF, Western Aust.
(In loving memory of her daughter, Alison, who died
on 14/9/93 aged 7 years).