Written by Suraj Shah. Inspired by greatness.
Have you lost someone who depended on you for their well being?
Some people in life are natural carers. They behave towards others with great respect, care and love.
Others are faced with a situation where they are forced to be a carer for someone who needs their support, fulfiling their duty the best way they can.
I believe you’re the second type, gradually becoming the first.
The care giver
You may be the husband, who looked after his wife right through to the day she died.
You may be the father, whose daugher married into a family that lives far away.
You may be the mother who waved goodbye to her son who has left home for university.
Whatever your role, you are a carer, a care giver, the giver of love and support and comfort.
Preparing for goodbye
As the husband with the severely ill wife, you may welcome her death, thinking that it may stop her suffering. With no prospect of a cure, you may have adjusted to the idea of your dear wife dying.
As the father whose daugher is about to be married, you may welcome her departure, understanding that she needs to start her own family.
As the mother whose son is about to leave home to start university, you may welcome his progression, realising that he needs to study and commence his career.
Whatever your role, you are a carer, a care giver, the giver of love and support and comfort.
Feelings of loss
When we care for others and the time comes for them to depart, it creates an inevitable vacuum in our lives.
We may feel bewildered or guilty or dislocated.
We may feel lost and confused and hurt.
With their loss, we may feel that we have lost our role in life. But does it mean we’re no longer a carer?
Continuing to care
Whatever the loss, the caring need not stop.
Find someone, something, anything to pour your love into.
Find someone to care for, mend a broken heart.
The pain of loss gets a little softer, the warmth of your presence expands.