bohm said:
There are some here that have allowed themselves to become so negative about faith and spirituality with regards to Jah and His son that they have turned this forum into more darkness than light therefore not allowing so many to join- in outta fear not being strong enough to have a voice.
Exactly, Bohm. Who's to blame if someone doesn't have the strength to post ANONYMOUSLY on an internet forum??? They're only pixels, peepol, only pixels. As Eleanor Roosevelt said, "no one can make you feel inferior without your letting them do so". Take responsibility and ownership of your own emotions: they're YOURS.
In fact, I can think of NO BETTER WAY to build one's self-esteem THAN to engage in anonymous conversations on exactly such a forum! Maintain your anonymity, and if it all goes horribly wrong, then you simply delete the account. OR don't log in. OR create a new ID. Or unplug the computer.
You live and learn, and you don't get anymore of a free training-wheel environment than forums like this.
Soft+gentile said:
KS - is this an inquisition
loss in the sense of being the lowest common denominator
Nope, just clarifying: I didn't want to write an essay on experiencing loss as an atheist, and then have you say you really meant something else...
But in thinking about it, everyone deals with loss in the same general way, although everyone goes thru steps at a different rate, or experiences relapse in steps.
Generally, psychologists refer to the stages of grief following loss by the acronym DABDA:
1) denial, i.e. "this is not happening to me"
2) anger, i.e. "why me? This is unfair!"
3) bargaining, i.e. appeals to God(s). (atheists skip this step: it's sort of the Shibboleth Test for atheists who are actually theists, if they DO bargain; OR theists bargain, and then realize there is no God, experiencing an epiphany in the process that external reality doesn't care about one's opinions or wishes)
4) depression,
5) acceptance (or resignation). i.e. "it happened, and there's nothing I could do to change the past".
Depending on the belief system, people go thru the grief process at different rates; some abuse substances to stay in steps, etc. But the process is rather universal to most.
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You asked how I deal with loss. I'll relate my tale.
My Mom died when I was late teens. When I got the news, I cried for awhile, but then asked myself if I was crying/grieving for HER sake, or for my loss? She was dying of terminal cancer, in constant pain, withering away, and the prognosis was grim. From her perspective, her continued existence had become nothing but misery, a struggle, every breath a fight. She was now peaceful. It was over. It wasn't a question of IF, but WHEN.
Now sure, it's OK for me to have grieved MY loss of a Mother, the fact she wouldn't see what I became, etc, but she got me to a point in life where I could make it on my own! In fact, her terminal caregiver nurse told me after she died that my Mom WAS holding on just to know that I (her youngest) would make it on my own, and once she knew that, she was free to let go... That's all any parent can hope for their children, to give them the life-skills needed to survive, to thrive in their absense.
That moment reminds me of the words of Jesus when he said, "it is done" and expired. That's a Biblical example, but it's also the frame of reference I grew up with, even if it's a truth that transcends any particular interpretation of any given "holy" text. It's not the exclusive domain of Xianity only, but the domain of LIFE on Earth.