Oprah has one of the top shows on television, but I rarely have time to see it.  Last week, however, I watched part of Oprah’s interview with Rosie O’Donnell.  For decades, Rosie had been portraying herself as a child whose mother died when she was in fifth grade.  Rosie’s former partner asked her if it was time to tell a different story – the story of a loving mother of four children.

Rosie agreed that time had come.

After the interview I thought about my own story of multiple losses.  Would I always be seen as a bereaved person?  Could I describe myself in new ways?  If so, what would those ways be?  I thought about the answers to these questions.

Clearly, multiple losses had changed my life and changed me.  These losses had been fused into my identity.  I will always be a bereaved parent, the mother of a brilliant daughter who died too soon.  I will always miss my father-in-law, brother, and former son-in-law.  The challenge, at least for me, is to learn from grief and create something positive from its ashes.

You may have come to the same realization.

This realization has changed my grief talks.  While I still state the facts – four of my loved ones died within nine months – I do it quickly and move on to the purpose of my talk.  Similar changes appear in the grief articles I write.  When I write an article, I have two goals.  One is to inform readers — in other words, to provide a few research findings — and the other is to offer hope.

Today, I portray myself as a grandparent raising her twin grandchildren and someone with a new life purpose.  Happiness is a personal decision. Instead of portraying ourselves as life’s victims, we can choose to portray ourselves as loving people who are grateful for the miracle of life.  The ability to do this comes with time, pain, and grief work.

Your grief story cannot be changed, but the way you tell it can be.  You may weave colorful descriptions and happy memories into your story.  Slowly and surely, you may weave humor into your story as well.  Telling a different version of your story does not change the facts.  A new version of your story, however, makes it more powerful and compelling.

Bereaved people are more than survivors.  We are searching beings, grateful for the gift of life.  Our stories are worth telling.

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Harriet Hodgson

Harriet Hodgson has been a freelancer for 43 years, is the author of thousands of articles, and 42 books, including 10 grief resources. She is Assistant Editor of the Open to Hope website, a member of the Association of Health Care Journalists, Alliance of Independent Authors, Minnesota Coalition for Grief Education and Support, and Grief Coalition of Southeastern Minnesota. She is well acquainted with grief. In 2007 four family members died—her daughter (mother of her twin grandchildren), father-in-law, brother (and only sibling) and the twins’ father. Multiple losses shifted the focus of Hodgson’s work from general health to grief resolution and healing. She has appeared on more than 185 radio talk shows, including CBS Radio, and dozens of television stations, including CNN. In addition to writing for Open to Hope, Hodgson is a contributing writer for The Grief Toolbox website and The Caregiver Space website. A popular speaker, she has given presentations at The Compassionate Friends national conference, Bereaved Parents of the USA national conference, and Zoom grief conferences. Her work is cited in Who’s Who of American Women, World Who’s Who of Women, Contemporary Authors, and other directories. For more information about this busy grandmother, great grandmother, author, and speaker please visit www.harriethodgson.com.

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