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A Family Disrupted: Dealing with the Death of a Sibling

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    [sad music]
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    Claire: I think we just all went into
    complete shock.
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    [sad music]
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    Lois: During the surgery, there was some
    blood loss, but they were monitoring it.
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    They thought, and in the end it was too
    much blood loss, and her heart stopped.
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    And they weren't able to get
    her revived again.
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    Jerry: He basically went into some water
    that had a very strong current,
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    and he lost his grip.
    And the water took him.
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    Claire: Somebody invited him to go on a
    sailboat in between Amsterdam and Holland
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    and Harwich, which is in Southern England.
    His boat basically just never arrived.
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    So we are left with a lot of questions as
    to what happened still.
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    Jerry: When I got the news, I can't really
    put into words what kind of level
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    of devastation it was.
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    Lois: In my mind, I just couldn't accept
    the fact that she had passed away until
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    I saw her body. So, they did take me to
    see her, and it hit me. She was still warm
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    and when I touched her I just couldn't
    believe it.
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    Jerry: While my Dad is still on the phone,
    my sister is helping me with my Mom
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    who is pretty much out-of-control at
    this point, and then I look at my Dad
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    and I see something in his face that I
    have never seen before. It was this--
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    it was like life just left his face,
    and it was this point of sadness
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    I've never seen on him.
    When I saw it, I got really scared.
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    Claire: Originally, we'd been told he had
    an 80% chance that he was alive
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    and he'd be found. There was just
    some small mishap that had happened.
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    And then gradually we were down to
    60, 40, 20, and then there was really
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    no hope that he was alive. And at that
    point I think shock, just complete
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    numbness set in.
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    Lois: I wanted to be alone in my grief.
    I didn't seem to want anyone around me.
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    And I live alone, so I headed home.
    And...once I got home it started.
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    The complete breakdown. The tears.
    I couldn't stop them. I had the shakes.
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    It was cold. I got into bed, and I just
    shook and cried.
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    Jerry: I don't know how he died.
    Why he died. I don't believe what they
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    are telling me. I'm so tired. People keep
    coming in. I can barely see because of
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    my eyes. I'm breaking down all the time.
    I can't do anything except cry.
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    And seeing my parents in such bad shape,
    it doesn't--it is so hard to see that.
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    Claire: My Mom was probably the most
    fragile of all of us. She's not the
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    healthiest person to begin with, and this
    just devastated her. She had a hard time
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    getting up, carrying on with every day
    activities. Gradually, that came back.
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    And I think with it some of her healing
    came. Actually, she was able to care for
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    me as sort of a child who'd come home.
    She still had me, and so she was an
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    excellent support to me in that regard
    and hopefully, vice versa.
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    My father, really, he's a traditional man.
    He didn't believe in showing grief.
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    Certainly, he'd been pretty adamant that
    we wouldn't cry or show emotion publicly
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    during either of the memorial services for
    Chris. And that pretty much carried on.
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    He felt that--I think he felt he was so
    close to breaking apart himself that if
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    he saw somebody else do it that would
    be the end.
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    Jerry: The question you get more than
    anything else was 'How are you?'
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    'How are you doing?'
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    You don't even want to answer that.
    You don't want to talk to them.
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    What do you want me to say to you.
    You can't--Most people there, thank God,
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    didn't understand what I was going
    through. A lot of my friends.
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    A lot of my brother's friends would come
    to the house. I was friends with most of
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    my brother's friends. It was good to see
    them because they were people that
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    could relate to my brother better than my
    own friends could, and they were close to
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    me. So I loved-I was happy that they were
    there, but I hated the how are you doing?
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    question because I could either lie to you
    or I could cry so you can't talk.
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    Do not ask me this right now.
    I don't like the question.
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    That question is a stupid question.
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    Claire: Some of our closest family
    friends as well.
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    I guess as they say,
    it wasn't that they weren't there
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    but they didn't want to listen.
    They didn't actually want to engage
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    with it. And so they would come and bustle
    around and leave very quickly.
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    And it was almost like a whirlwind coming
    through our lives, as opposed to bringing
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    the peace and security and stability
    we wanted.
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    Lois: The funeral itself was difficult.
    It was something that I guess for me
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    was especially difficult because six
    months before Shirley died, our
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    mother had passed away. And this was
    bringing back memories of Shirley and I
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    being there for our mother's funeral.
    And I didn't realize that six months
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    after burying my mother, that I would
    be burying my sister.
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    Jerry: My mom, she didn't get better.
    She was pretty much bedridden.
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    She couldn't get out of bed ever.
    She spent all day in there.
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    She cried literally all day, and we take
    turns trying to help my mom.
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    Seeing her in that much pain just adds
    to the pain that we're in.
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    Lois: At the end, after the service at the
    grave, I was the last to leave.
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    And I didn't want to leave.
    I felt I was leaving her behind, but...
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    of course one had to go. So, again
    I was invited to go back with everyone
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    to meet with some people at the house
    who were from out-of-town that were
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    coming, but I really didn't want to do
    that so I didn't. I just said I needed to
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    be alone. But I think that's me as a
    person. I just wanted to grieve
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    ...by myself.
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    Claire: Certainly my relationship
    with my parents has changed pretty
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    dramatically since Chris's death.
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    I think my mom particularly it has
    effected her greatly.
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    She's lost actually two kids now,
    and I am the one that's left.
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    And she gets very scared for me.
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    Jerry: Where my family is now since
    my brother died is it is in an
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    interesting place. My mom has more
    fear than I wish she would towards me.
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    She doesn't want me to do anything.
    It is just maternal instinct.
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    She doesn't like it when I do things like
    snowboard. Anything where there is
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    any risk what so ever. I try hard to
    understand that. I know where she is
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    coming from, but at the same time,
    I can't just stop living. If anything,
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    for my brother. That would destroy
    him if he knew I stopped living
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    when he died.
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    Claire: In my mind, they are kind of
    excessively afraid for me sometimes.
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    And they have to let me go because
    I have to live my own life.
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    On the same hand, I cannot make it
    all okay for them. They have to find
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    their own friends. And I don't think
    you can ever fill the gap of the loss
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    of Chris, but you can find new
    experiences you might not have had.
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    Maybe search out new friendship
    groups to fulfill some of those social
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    support needs that you now have.
    So, I guess I'd say we are a lot closer,
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    and we look after each other a lot
    more, but at the same point, it is
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    something we are continuing negotiating.
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    Jerry: If my mom, dad and sister went
    somewhere and they are a couple hours
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    late now the worst scenario runs
    through my head. And I feel so
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    uncomfortable because I think what
    would I do if I lost them?
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    It puts me in an even worse place
    because I lost my brother.
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    I know what it feels like.
    If I lost the rest of them I don't think
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    I can live through it. That's how I feel
    about it. I need them, and I hope...
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    I think they know that. I don't express it
    as much as I'd like to but I try to.
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    Lois: I just it is hard to express the
    words that I felt inside.
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    That I guess I wasn't alone
    'cause after the loss of my parents
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    and Shirley, I felt I was very alone.
    In the sense that I had lost my
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    immediate family but Jenelle and
    Lindsey and Ken kept saying you know
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    that we are together. We are family.
    And we are going to be there
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    for each other.
    So, that means a lot to me.
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    Claire: Anger. I feel a lot of anger.
    Sometimes I think I really gotten
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    control of that. Sometimes it springs up.
    I was saying that this has been the sixth
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    anniversary of his death and oh...
    I felt the anger again.
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    I feel angry that he depended on people
    and they let him down.
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    That he went into life into an experience
    trusting that nothing could go wrong.
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    And that really was human error and
    a bit of chance that almost seemed to
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    have conspired against him.
    I can remember this distinctly
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    waking up in the middle of the night
    about a week after he'd gone missing
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    and thinking that he was or he had been
    calling for me. And that he'd been hoping
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    that I would be there. That I would come,
    and maybe even believing that we would.
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    Even though realistically there was no
    way we could have changed the event.
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    I have felt a lot of guilt thinking he was
    waiting for me and I didn't come and that
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    somehow telepathically I should
    have known 'cause frankly I didn't
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    have any sign that he was, that there was
    something wrong. I had no inkling.
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    I was going along pretty happy in my life,
    and the news of his disappearance came as
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    a complete shock.
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    Jerry: So when this happened I wasn't
    angry but I wanted to blame God to some
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    level because you know everyone is saying
    this is God's will.
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    They want the better people yada yada ya.
    I don't want to be angry at him.
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    I don't lose faith. I still think...
    I know he's there, but I don't want to be
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    angry with him. So I am using all my faith
    and power not to hate God
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    for taking my brother.
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    Claire: I do feel sort of angry at Chris
    himself because he's left behind so much
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    distress. I know he never would have
    intended, and I know that where ever he
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    is I am sure he's walking out with
    less in terms of the pain we still feel
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    and the loneliness for him and the
    sadness. Sometimes I feel angry.
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    Why did he have to go on that boat?
    Why did he always have to be so
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    adventurous? Why when I needed him
    wasn't he there? 'Cause I really needed
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    him to actually understand and deal
    with his death. It sort of just this crazy
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    experience that just when you need
    the person who means that much to you.
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    Claire: The advice that I'd give to
    somebody who is recently lost a
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    a brother. I think it would be to
    be very gentle with yourself.
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    Not to minimize the experience or the
    loss that you've had cause certainly
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    there is a lot of focus on parents' loss
    and it is a tremendous loss to parents
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    no doubt about it. But the loss of a
    siblings, that person you've grown up
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    with who has shared all those little
    things in life that you have.
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    That loss is profound.
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    Jerry: With people that knew him,
    I like to talk about him.
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    I am fortunate that one of his best
    friends is my neighbor, and she is a
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    big talker. She loves to talk.
    So it is easy to talk to her about it.
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    And she is right there to talk,
    and that helps.
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    Claire: In my case, I think we had some
    people come by and sort of suggest that
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    I needed to slow down and in a very
    quiet, a very gentle way, but in a way
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    that made me stop and think.
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    Lois: There is no shortcuts that you--
    I feel you have to grieve.
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    You have to let the pain--You have to
    go where the pain is.
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    Not to ignore your feelings or perhaps,
    you might think I am not going to think
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    about that or look at her picture because
    it brings too much pain.
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    And I found that is the way you heal
    is by going and facing the pain and the
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    grief and letting it come out.
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    Claire: I think another thing we found
    really helpful were resource books.
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    And I think the reading and the books
    out there were the way we could
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    each uniquely find a different approach
    to understanding grief.
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    My father had to go to philosophical
    understandings of grief.
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    Mine were mostly stories is what helped
    me and then my mom seemed to get into
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    more of the spiritual.
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    Lois: I feel that you have to be there
    for one another. Life is short on this
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    Earth so if you can find the good in
    every day and to realize how lucky
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    you are to be here. And don't waste it.
    Don't waste your time.
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    Jerry: I hope I don't forget Jamie.
    I don't think I will. I made a little
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    scrap book. Not for anybody else.
    Just for me. That I want to look at
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    whenever I feel like it. It is full
    of pictures. It is full of words.
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    It is full of letters. It's just for me.
    I don't want to forget him.
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    I don't think I will.
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    Claire: In terms of feeling connected
    to Chris. There has been a big shift
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    in the first. I'd say in the first two years
    I could hear his voice. I still remembered
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    his expressions and you can still actually
    smell the [laugh] well, he was an athlete.
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    Let me say his clothes didn't always
    smell sweet, but there was a lot of
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    tangibles that were still there that we
    could rely on. And with time, those do go.
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    I can't hear his voice the way
    I used to.
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    Jerry: I have dreams about him. I love it
    when I have dreams about him.
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    They usually don't make sense.
    I don't care. If he is in it then that is
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    great. Sometimes it is realistic.
    Like he just shows up and I am going
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    God! Where have you been? I knew
    you weren't dead.
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    Claire: I can picture him in my mind and
    certainly he comes to me in my dreams
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    sometimes but some of it's a little shady.
    You know it is getting a little shadier
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    around the edges.
    I can't quite picture him.
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    Lois: I do talk to Shirley both in my
    head and out loud.
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    Sometimes there is a situation going on
    and I will say:
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    Shirley I need your help here.
    I guess I believe that she is there
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    with me as well as my parents.
    Coming today I was talking to
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    Shirley and my parents, asking them to
    give me the strength to do this.
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    I feel her presence,
    her spirit is with me.
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    I am curious what is going
    to happen when I am thirty.
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    I hope I am still dreaming about him.
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    Is he still going to be twenty-four when
    I am thirty? I don't know what is going
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    to happen. I just have to wait. I really
    hope that I keep dreaming about him.
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    Claire: So, what I have done recently.
    I guess the strategies I have is I try
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    to do activities that we love doing
    together and really going out and
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    searching for them. My husband
    and I have started doing adventure
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    racing. So, we even go off to the
    mountains and do these really long
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    trail runs and kayaks. I just know that
    although he wasn't there or he was
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    never actually there with us. It is
    something he would have wanted to do.
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    He's there in spirit, and I feel really
    connected to him when I do it.
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    Jerry: I had a dream once that I went
    sailing with him. I like to sail.
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    My brother never has, and I know
    he would love it. And in my dream
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    I took him sailing and that made me
    feel so good when I woke up.
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    Just to feel as though I did take him
    sailing, and he loved it.
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    So I don't want those things to stop ever.
Title:
A Family Disrupted: Dealing with the Death of a Sibling
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
22:24

English subtitles

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