Healing
Power of the Pen

The first year
after a death of a child is like having the worse noise possible running through your head
each day and night. There is no way to turn the horrendous sounds off because there is no
off button.

I wrote through that
noise. I wrote from the heavy bag of emotions bereaved parents must carry--anger, guilt, sorrow and confusion, all the
"what ifs" and "how comes" and "whys."

I wrote of longing
for a blond-haired boy with blue eyes who laughter brightened hospital rooms. A quiet spot
under weeping willows at a local park is where I carried my pen, journal and pain. As I
wrote over the course of many months, I was, although I didn't realize it at the time,
providing therapy for myself.

Some days when the
weather did not permit a trip to the park and my body and mind harbored excruciating pain,
I shut myself in a room, away from my other children and husband. I'd grab my
journal and let the experiences of the day and my feelings freely emerge onto each white
page. Grammar didn't matter, penmanship went out the window. These aren't a concern when
you are writing to survive.

Writing the
heartache, complete and honest, is a way of healing. Our cry is, "Help me with this
pain!" We find ourselves lamenting as King David did in Psalm 13:2, "How long
must I wrestle with my thoughts and every day have sorrow in my heart?" David wrote
many of his psalms starting with anger and agony and gradually, ending with hope.

Writing can do that for us.
We enter into our devastation, get a good grip on what our struggles are and something
about seeing them on paper causes us to realize the pain is not only within us anymore. It
is shared, even if only on a sheet of notebook paper. It is documented and the more we
write, the better we are able to understand and deal with our intense sorrow.

Some people think only the
creative types write, when in reality, writing through the pain is available to anyone who
has suffered the loss of a child. "I don't have time," many say. "What will
I write?" others wonder. The blank page scares some because they think they
have to fill it with something profound.

But just writing a memory of
your child or a few lines about how you felt after he died is a notable start. If we think
of writing as a private endeavor and an effective tool, not a paper to be graded by a high
school English teacher, we will conquer many of the doubts about our ability. In time, we
will see that writing helps us become better in tune with our feelings and thoughts. It
clarifies our lives and gives us understanding.

Other reasons to take the
time to write are:
To experience
personal growth.
To leave a legacy or a keepsake so that there
will be recordings of what and who our child was.
To demonstrate a way of cherishing our child.
To feel a connection to our child as we
remember the things we shared here on earth.

We also are honoring our
grief, our pain and what has happened to us. We are validating its existence. As studies
have shown, writing is healthy for our minds and bodies.

Professor James Pennebaker
claims that writing actually helps the physical body when the writer is able to open up,
by sharing deep feelings on paper over a period of time. In his study, half a group of
students at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, wrote their heartfelt thoughts
and feelings about a stressful event from their lives; the other half wrote about
superficial topics. Each group wrote for twenty minutes a day, for four consecutive days.

Before writing and
immediately after writing, blood pressure and heart rates were tested and a galvanic skin
response was done. Six weeks later, the students had their blood tested again.

The group that had written
about trivial topics showed no sign of changes. But the group that had poured their pain
onto paper, claimed writing had actually calmed them. Their skin was drier after writing
and both heart rate and blood pressure had decreased. Their blood work even showed an
increase in lymphocytes, the white blood cells that work to keep the immune system
healthy.

Writing through the heartache
of losing a child is some of the best therapy I have found on this journey. I didn't know
how helpful it was. I just knew I needed to organize any thoughts and get them out on
paper. Now, four years since my four-year-old son Daniel's death, I see that when all the
evidence is presented, there is no reason not to write. It causes dim skies to light up
when not only the pain, but also the love and cherished memories, are recorded.
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Healing
Power of The Pen was first published in the Durham, NC, Herald-Sun on
April 15, 2001.
Published
in We Need Not Walk Alone, summer issue, 2001, under the title Writing
The Heartache

Special thanks to Alice J. Wisler © for giving
us permission to publish Healing
Power of the Pen on Compassion Connection.

 

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