The Connection between Love and Grief — grateful, yet grieving

(Photo: Unsplash)

My favorite hot beverage in the morning is a cup of coffee. I used to drink it with cream. When blended together it was a beautiful color. Once the cream was poured in there was no way to take the cream out of the coffee. Some things cannot be separated. I found it similar to grief and love. You can’t take love out of grief, or grief out of love.   

Mary-Frances O’Connor, Associate Professor at the University of Arizona, in her new book The Grieving Brain: The Surprising Science of How we Learn from Love and Loss, says,

“You can’t really study grief without studying love. There has to be something that is ‘lost’, and that means there has to be a bond before the bond can be broken by death. The neurobiology of attachment has taught us a great deal about how that bond is physically encoded in the brain”

This is fascinating and validating. We are hardwired for connection and attachment. God made us in His image; body, mind, soul, and spirit. In Matthew 22:37 (CSB), we are told to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.” Not one or the other, but all of them in sync together.

In a culture that is uncomfortable and uneducated in how to grieve, this is affirming.

We spoke vows and gave rings to someone; We gave birth to someone; We were birthed by someone. We shared a life with someone. We created a bond and an attachment to them. And now they are gone. Of course, we will grieve. All the parts of us will grieve. Our body will experience the effects of grief in subtle and obvious ways. Our brains will remember and recall countless memories. Our souls will ache in pain without words. Our spirits groan and weep as we cry out to God.

There’s a bittersweetness in the synchrony of grief and love. We loved in our own unique way and we will grieve in our own individual way. The evidence of our love is seen in our grief.

Give

Subscribe to the Daybreak Devotions for Women

Be inspired by God's Word every day! Delivered to your inbox.


More from Pam Luschei

  • featureImage

    Moving toward the Light — Grateful, yet Grieving

    This past summer, I was able to travel with my two adult children to four national parks. With the limits of travel due to the quarantine, we made a road trip and went to Yosemite, Grand Tetons, Yellowstone, and Glacier. I made a goal of seeing the sunset in each park at least once. As I

    3 min read
  • featureImage

    Creating Hope — Grateful, yet Grieving

    After college, I worked with children with special needs in a child development center. One of the activities I would create for the children was an art project, usually with a theme or related to the season of the year. I remember distinctly that it was all about the “process, not the product.” Ea

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    Temporary Gifts — Grateful, yet Grieving

    Last week was my wedding anniversary. The date on the calendar has been etched in my brain since 1981, when I walked down the aisle. It was a day of gratitude for the years I did have, while grieving the years I didn’t get to have. Recently, while attending a memorial service, I heard the

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    Three Funerals and One Graduation — Grateful, yet Grieving

    So much of life is defined by beginnings and endings. In the last 6 months, I’ve attended three funerals and one college graduation. All of the events were marked by a start and a finish. All of the events provided the participants with an experience of collective connection. The funerals were all

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    Keep Going — Grateful, yet Grieving

    By Sarah Christy I am someone who knows grief and desires to live in the light. I am a writer and a close friend of God who prompts me to Keep Going. I have always enjoyed words and stories and have used journaling as a way of processing my life. My husband of 58 years died in June. He had Alzhei

    3 min read

Editor's Picks

More from Pam Luschei

  • featureImage

    Moving toward the Light — Grateful, yet Grieving

    This past summer, I was able to travel with my two adult children to four national parks. With the limits of travel due to the quarantine, we made a road trip and went to Yosemite, Grand Tetons, Yellowstone, and Glacier. I made a goal of seeing the sunset in each park at least once. As I

    3 min read
  • featureImage

    Creating Hope — Grateful, yet Grieving

    After college, I worked with children with special needs in a child development center. One of the activities I would create for the children was an art project, usually with a theme or related to the season of the year. I remember distinctly that it was all about the “process, not the product.” Ea

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    Temporary Gifts — Grateful, yet Grieving

    Last week was my wedding anniversary. The date on the calendar has been etched in my brain since 1981, when I walked down the aisle. It was a day of gratitude for the years I did have, while grieving the years I didn’t get to have. Recently, while attending a memorial service, I heard the

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    Three Funerals and One Graduation — Grateful, yet Grieving

    So much of life is defined by beginnings and endings. In the last 6 months, I’ve attended three funerals and one college graduation. All of the events were marked by a start and a finish. All of the events provided the participants with an experience of collective connection. The funerals were all

    2 min read
  • featureImage

    Keep Going — Grateful, yet Grieving

    By Sarah Christy I am someone who knows grief and desires to live in the light. I am a writer and a close friend of God who prompts me to Keep Going. I have always enjoyed words and stories and have used journaling as a way of processing my life. My husband of 58 years died in June. He had Alzhei

    3 min read