Always Choose Joy. Unless You Can’t…

Compassion meme
“Here’s to the compassionate people!”

I’ve been on a JOY kick all year. Ok. I get it. I just got married in October and I’m full of the feels. But yesterday, I got a reminder that sometimes…no matter how much you WANT to…joy eludes you for an indeterminate amount of time.

I belong to a few widow’s support groups on Facebook. I have cockily thought to myself from time to time that I certainly don’t NEED a widow’s support group anymore. That is, until I DO. Then I am ever so grateful for those who share and lift each other up, no matter where they land on the grief/time continuum.

There have been times when I read about the desperate sadness we as the bereaved quite normally go through and my heart breaks for them. I think of all the times I didn’t think I could go on. I think of all the wonderful people who supported and loved me through the most horrific event I have experienced up to this moment in time. There were people I didn’t even know…you readers…who lifted me and helped me move forward, even as I tried to lift others. 

But yesterday there was a post that garnered a good deal of pushback and it gave me pause. Basically, this person was saying…just choose joy. That’s a gross simplification, but that was the bottom line. Just choose joy. It made me think about my cheerleading and jumping on the JOY TRAIN and how it may seem dismissive of those who are still in the active throes of grief. 

It’s damned hard to find joy when the person who was so much your SOURCE of joy is no longer here. I know this in the core of my being. When I was in my darkest dark place in grief, I truly felt I would never find a glimmer of happiness in this lifetime again…let alone JOY. And yes…you DO have to make a lot of choices in this new normal. One of them is choosing to keep living. Choosing to keep trying. Choosing to keep moving forward no matter HOW hard it is or lonely or heart breaking. 

We choose to do this for others….our kids, our parents, our friends…even our person who “would want me to live my life”. Eventually, it is my fervent HOPE that we choose to do this for ourselves. 

I have been guilty of using the word “choose” a little too blithely, I’m afraid. And if I have, and it has caused you pain, may I offer my humblest apologies. It is not easy to choose when you are in overwhelming pain. It’s not that I forgot this…but maybe I push it a bit too far out of reach to mentor as effectively as I would like to. 

I want you to have hope. I want you to find joy. I want you to experience good things in your life again. I know it CAN happen…I’m proof. It just needs to happen in its own time. And when you DO experience what passes as joy, it may not look the same as someone else’s and that’s ok. I just wanted you to know…I haven’t forgotten those of you whose hearts are so incredibly crushed. I will strive to always hold a sacred space for you here.

❤️

“My comfort in my suffering is this: Your promise preserves my life.”

Psalm 119:50 NIV

6 thoughts on “Always Choose Joy. Unless You Can’t…

  1. Very good advice, but with the elderly when they lose their love one, its hard to find much joy in anything. Families far away, Really no one near. Illiness may be on them as well, Hard to find joy.
    Hugs, Melba

  2. It is almost impossible to find joy in the middle of grief. But if you can’t find those big moments of joy you can find the little moments. The kindness of a stranger, a door opened for you, a smile given to you. Those are the small joy moments that can help a grieving heart?

  3. I am so sad since my husband died a month ago. I keep putting one step in front of the other, my heart is in a constant state of emptiness. I miss Doug soooooo much…I was with him 24/7 (with few exceptions to go to church, get groceries, yard work at the other house). I know my life now has to adjust to a new “normal”. Loss is so difficult to navigate. I find little joy to grasp onto, and I am terrified to make connections with even the people I know.

    1. I understand. While everyone experiences grief differently, I remember that feeling of not wanting to connect with anyone because I couldn’t bear losing anyone else. That’s called hyper vigilance and it’s perfectly normal with trauma, which is what deep grief is. It has eased for me over time, but I still have moments where I’m at the edge of my tolerance and beg God not to test me anymore for a little while. Grief is hard, hard work…the hardest I’ve ever done. Sending prayers for strength and courage to move forward, dear one. ❤️

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *