The next step in the grief cycle is anger. It’s understandable. Probably one of the few things I understand
the most about grief. We didn't ask for
this to happen. We didn't want this to
happen. We didn't like what we had to do
in order to get through it. So why not
be angry? This is how I dealt with my
anger. That’s me on the far right in the blue and pink
with a weird half clown mask on and green hair that was really icky and stringy. And the others are the ones who helped me
bleed this anger from me. You’re
probably wondering how that happened.
Well, this is how.
I have a bit of a temper.
I've always had it. And I know
exactly who I got it from, too. In the fall
of 2012, I was losing my grip on my temper.
I wanted to lash out at everyone who I came into contact with. Family, friends, it didn't really
matter. I was just so angry and I wasn't
sure where it was coming from or how to take care of it. Remember, I had no idea at all that I was
just going through the grief cycle. To
me, I was just angry. I had lots of
reasons to be angry. But I hadn't
settled on the one reason why. And
honestly, if I had known why, there wasn't really much that I could have done
to solve it. So I just stayed angry.
It had been about two years and three months since my child
had been born when I finally turned and faced my anger head on. My birthday is October 30th. And before you worry over the fact that I
didn't get to be a Halloween baby, don’t worry.
My birthday is the same as my late grandfather’s, and for the last five
years of his life, I was the apple of his eye.
In 2012, I was turning 30. I was
turning 30 on the 30th of October.
I thought to myself, “I have to do something different this year. This is never going to happen again.” People suggested the usual: sky diving (fear
of heights), river rafting (can’t swim), go to Vegas (with my addictive
personality???). All of them I turned
down. No, my sights were set on something
better and stranger.
My first best-ex was working at a theater in Atlanta and
they were putting on a charity haunted house and needed people to dress up and
scare people. I don’t really like
haunted houses, mostly because of the scare factor and my amazing ability to
get startled very easily. However
working a haunted house, that was something entirely different. I knew exactly where all the scares
were. I saw everything in the light of
day; long before night fell and the black lights came on. I knew where everything was and knew what to
expect. On top of that, I got to scare
people while wearing funky costumes. And
this is where I drained my anger.
On my birthday night, I was
dressed as a mad clown with two fake wooden knives and got three scares. I popped out of a curtain, peered out from
behind a spinning wheel with a fake clown nailed to it brandishing my wooden
knives, and then popped out of a small box.
Each time cackling to the innocent patrons that they would never get out
alive and threatening to nail them to the spinning wheel. Somewhere in the first couple of nights,
before my birthday show, I realized that doing stuff like this is a gentle form
of violence. People were giving us money
to walk into this place and get yelled at and growled at and startled and
scream and run for the exits wherever they may be. And I dived into it with a vengeance. I yelled, I snarled, I threatened, and I
directed every ounce of anger in me at the people who came near my spots. By the end of Halloween night, I was
exhausted and my temper finally appeased.
I managed to get lucky and direct my anger in a very
positive way. Well, at least one can call
it positive. We were raising money for a
no-kill pet shelter and a day home for the elderly so they could hire teachers
and get craft supplies. And once I took
off the mask and put down the fake knives, my scaring days were over until the
next haunted house I could find. But there’s
a variety of ways to express anger that don’t involve evil clowns.
Breaking tiles to make mosaics, ripping paper
to make collages, writing very angrily and hopefully not breaking the keyboard
as you type, or just finding a safe place in which to scream at everything that
is making you hurt. Whatever you have to
do, I hope you find something to get the anger out of you so it doesn't
fester. Being angry all the time is
really an exhausting way to be. Trust
me. I was angry for a solid six months
before I finally got it all out. And I
don’t suggest staying angry for that long.
How do you deal with anger?
How do you deal with anger?
Thank you for posting the first two steps in the cycle. I am so unsure where I am at this point and It is nice to read that I am not the only one who has felt the things I have been feeling or have felt the past two years. I look forward to reading the next installment.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry I'm so late in answering you. And believe me, I understand being unsure about where you are in dealing with something like this. I didn't figure it all out until I was deep into it as I have said. And I can assure you, you are not the only one who has been feeling like this. I have known many in the same boat. Hope you are doing well!!
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