a grief postponed book cover
UPCOMING:

A Grief Postponed

A Nurse's Journey Through Delayed Grief

(Working Title)

A captivating journey through the depths of delayed grief, resilience, and renewal.

There are many reasons why people suppress their grief. At the time of death, we might lack the skills to process overwhelming emotions; effective role models for grieving could be absent; or we may perceive ourself as the strong one in the family, thus adopting a stoic stance. Acute or chronic medical illnesses, struggles with substance use disorder, divorce, relocation, or immersion in a demanding work project are examples of distractions that can lead to delayed grief. Some of us carry a persistent feeling of incomplete mourning. If we avoid open conversations about our grief and fail to confront our emotions, they don’t just disappear; instead, they become a physical burden we carry into the future.

Our loss might resurface one, two, or even 20 years later. Delayed grief can be triggered by various events: another loss, a book, a movie, a friend’s sorrow, or something as subtle as the sunlight reflecting off a snowbank, evoking memories of the day our loved one died. The grief is profound and demands processing, yet our support system may have moved on. In the face of these intense emotions, what steps can we take? In upcoming book, A Grief Postponed: A Nurse’s Journey Through Delayed Grief, author Jacqueline Werket sheds light on her unique and profound experience with delayed grief.

Quotes

Read an Excerpt

"In 1981, three months after the birth of my second child, Sarah, I began to have body aches, random panic attacks and fatigue so potent I thought if I stopped and gave in to it, I’d die. Convinced I was physically ill, I had a blood panel drawn. The results were normal. Normal! I was angry and confused.

Later that day, Sarah and I were stuck in the car during a rainstorm. I turned and looked at my baby girl asleep in her car seat. Captured by her innocence, I began to cry. As I turned to get a Kleenex from my purse, I was suddenly gripped by something stronger than déjà vu. “Dear God,” I cried out. “Is this what it’s all about?” Here I am with another child, in front of another house and with another husband, but all my feelings belong to a different time, ten years earlier in 1971 when my first child had died.

In June 1971, my 16-month-old son, Ian, died from megakaryocytic leukemia, a rare form of leukemia. The doctors offered us the hope of remission, so we opted for chemotherapy. Treatment was a nightmare. Ian died ten weeks later. Ian’s death was steeped in silence. My husband left me four months later. No one in my family spoke Ian’s name, except once by my father who told me that over time, I would forget Ian. I repressed my grief, and for ten years, it became a shape shifter wreaking havoc on my life in ways I didn't understand. I forgot Ian’s birthdate and the anniversary of his death. But every spring, the season Ian underwent chemotherapy and died my body remembered. Everything from my fingers down to my toes ached. Even my scalp hurt to touch. I had acquired a visceral response to spring.

After the grief resurfaced, I vowed to embrace it. I didn’t want Sarah to grow up with a mom who was emotionally distant because she couldn’t access her feelings. I had tried to grieve Ian’s death alone but, I simply survived. I realized that recognizing when you need help is very deep wisdom. I found a therapist and a grief group. I learned the only way to heal grief is to feel it and that healing takes place within community not in isolation. I redefined strong learning that real strength is gained through vulnerability not in being stoic. Listening to the grief group members helped bring my repressed grief to the surface. As I listened to their stories, I heard aspects of my own. By telling my story aloud I saw where I had gotten stuck. Members brought up topics I was reluctant to think about.

As I neared the end of my healing journey, I took two final steps. I needed to remember Ian’s birthday and the date of his death. A nurse, Sue, who worked at the hospital pulled Ian’s chart so I could read it. His well baby check-ups were in the front of the hospital chart. As I read the clinic visits about a healthy, happy little boy with normal growth and development, it dawned on me, when I repressed the sad memories, I lost all the good memories too!"