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We cannot always shed tears when we are sad. Sometimes it is not the right place or time. And sometimes we just don’t want to anymore. The piece below is a good testament to the times when we cannot cry.

It comes to fill our hollows of loss. To accompany our loneliness. To be with our pain. So when you’ve lost someone important in your life, by death or distance; or if you’ve lost a certain hope for the future; you may find a sense of grief. Or maybe it finds you…

It’s all a bit of an enigma sometimes. For grief is a something in the middle of a new nothing. A heaviness in the emptiness.

And, often, with grief can come tears. Even if you don’t always let yourself cry them…

At this time of year, with all the special occasions and anniversaries and expectations, all those un-cried tears – both old and new – can make themselves felt all the more.
So where do you keep yours?

Where do you actually carry them, your un-cried tears*?

If you sit for a moment, just you and your sorrow in some stillness, whereabouts in your body do you sense that sadness residing just now?

And what might it be like not to feel under pressure to fix or placate or silence or hide it? But just to acknowledge it? Just to see it? Maybe even to accept it?

How might you and your grief help one another through this loss?

It seems an odd question, I know.But even though it’s a bit counter-intuitive, sometimes it’s worth getting closer to your grief like this.

For though grief can seem painful from a distance, like something to steer well clear of, when you actually give yourself a chance to get to know it better, your grief – and your tears – can also offer you a path towards healing. At whatever pace feels right for you…

Text by Gabrielle Gawne-Kelnar – writer, blogger and Sydney psychotherapist in private practice at One Life Counselling & Psychotherapy. Gabrielle also facilitates telephone support groups for people who are living with cancer, for their carers, and for people who have been bereaved through a cancer experience.

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