Saturday Star

Coping with grief triggers

- KATIE C REILLY Washington Post The

WEEKS after my eldest daughter was born, I went on a pram walk with her around our neighbourh­ood.

My mother had died seven years before and my father three years before, so her birth had left me on an emotional high after many years of grieving. At one point on our walk, I heard “honks” of a goose loudly overhead.

My dad loved to hunt geese as much for the ritual of explaining and participat­ing in it with other people. The goose sound I heard immediatel­y conjured an image of him. And I suddenly burst into tears as a familiar sadness filled my body.

What I experience­d, experts say, is a grief trigger. Well after the intense grief of an immediate loss has faded, and you think you’ve moved on, something happens out of the blue to revive it.

“A lot of people use the metaphor of waves of grief just when you think you are getting back on your feet, you are knocked over by a wave that you didn’t see coming,” says Camille Wortman, professor emeritus at Stony Brook University and an expert on grief and bereavemen­t. “I think that’s a good metaphor.”

Many people who have experience­d loss will have experience with grief triggers, but research about them is limited. A recent study noted there had been only a handful of research papers on the phenomenon in the past two decades despite how significan­t such triggers are in the “grief recovery trajectory”.

Recently, experts have started to use the term grief “activator”, rather than “trigger”. There’s “the realisatio­n that for a lot of folks, hearing words that are associated with how their person died can also be activating. And so, every time we use the word trigger, it can call to mind ideas of homicide and gun violence, anything that involves a trigger,” says Jana Decristofa­ro, a grief support group facilitato­r at the Dougy Centre, a non-profit group dedicated to supporting grieving children and young adults.

Some grief activators are more predictabl­e than others, like the ones tied to calendar dates, such as holidays, anniversar­ies and birthdays, and events such as a birth, graduation, wedding or retirement, Wortman says.

Others are tied to our senses, such as hearing a song that reminds you of the person you lost or eating food that reminds you of them or seeing someone who looks like them, says Sarah Kroenke, the co-founder of the Grief Club of Minnesota.

“What activates grief is the awareness of the loss. It’s something that brings to mind the loss,” says Katherine Shear, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University and director for the Centre for Complicate­d Grief.

Annie Sperling’s husband, Adam, died of a virulent type of brain tumour last year. Her grief is often activated on special milestone celebratio­ns, but also by movies, food and sporting events her husband loved.

“There are times where I’ve been driving in the car and all of a sudden a song comes on the radio that reminds me of Adam, and I’ll break down in tears,” Sperling says. “And it’s a song that I’ve heard a million times, but sometimes the words or just the music itself can tug at your heart strings.”

Grief triggers are hard to avoid and can occur many years after the death of a loved one, Wortman says.

But she and other experts said there were things that bereaved people can do to try to manage these moments.

¡ Create a plan in advance for the predictabl­e calendar dates that trigger sadness and grief. The plan should be realistic and simple, Kroenke says. “Have a moment of silence, light a candle, so that that day doesn’t come and go and you feel like we didn’t do anything to acknowledg­e that person, but also that it doesn't feel too overwhelmi­ng with the anticipati­on of those days coming up,” she says.

Decristofa­ro suggests building up your capacity to deal with the difficult times by establishi­ng a tool kit of activities or resources you can turn to.

Kroenke and Decristofa­ro both suggest having a person you can call for support, journallin­g and taking a deep breath. Therapy, support groups, listening to music, exercise, meditation and baking also help Sperling cope.

¡ Experts also emphasise the importance of self-compassion when a grief activator occurs.

“We want (bereaved individual­s) to take care of themselves, to be compassion­ate toward themselves and not to be self-critical,” Shear says.

When we give ourselves permission to have our emotions, sometimes grief activators don’t feel so scary or overwhelmi­ng, Decristofa­ro says.

¡ All the experts say it's important to remember that grief activators are a part of the grieving process.

"In the clinical world of providing grief support, (they are) not viewed as a step backward, but rather just a natural and normal part of the grieving process," Kroenke says. But, if the activators start to feel unmanageab­le, experts also advise bereaved individual­s to speak to a grief therapist to process any potential unresolved issues.

Decristofa­ro suggests trying to shift from viewing grief activators as a negative experience to an opportunit­y to feel connected to the person that we lost, despite the feelings that it may evoke.

Grief activators remind us "of the reality that the people in our life who have died meant something to us“.

“They played a meaningful role in our lives and that they continue to play a meaningful role in our life, even if they are not here in their physical form," Decristofa­ro says.

Not long ago, the anniversar­y of my father's birthday passed. It's hard with two small kids to take time to mark that remembranc­e. But I thought of him and took a walk around the neighbourh­ood, something we did together often when he was alive.

“Although I will miss him, I was able to remember him and spend time with him, if only in my mind.” |

 ?? ?? GRIEF activators can come out of the blue long after the intense grief of an immediate loss has faded. | DAVID RITCHIE African News Agency (ANA)
GRIEF activators can come out of the blue long after the intense grief of an immediate loss has faded. | DAVID RITCHIE African News Agency (ANA)
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