| Coping with a
Real Loss
While gaining better control over a fluffy yellow ball is a very serious
matter to many, we are too often soberly reminded that winning and
losing in tennis is nothing compared with losing a friend. Tragedy is
never welcome and many tennis icons have departed far too soon including
Tony Wilding, Vitas Gerulaitis, and Arthur Ashe. While playing social
tennis with Pat Cramer last week (1972 Wimbledon round of 16), Pat told
me of the enormous respect he had for another great person that left us
early, Tim Gullikson. Perhaps Billy Joel was accurate in singing about
those who die young!
On a more local level, Bob Speed, a regular tennis partner of a
friend, Cliff Kurtzman, recently died while playing tennis in the
Houston sun. He was only 58 and left the planet doing one of the things
that he most enjoyed. This article is dedicated to Bob, his family, his
friends, and to all of us who must find ways to cope with a real loss.
The Grieving Process
Much has been said about how we grieve. It is more likely that each
person experiences their own loss uniquely. Still, human experience
often conforms to recognizable patterns. Researcher Kubler-Ross is best
known for describing grief as progressing through a series of stages
beginning with Numbness and proceeding to Denial & Isolation, Anger,
Depression and finally Acceptance. A more contemporary view holds that
grieving involves the need to: (1) recognize the loss, (2) release the
emotions of grief, (3) develop new skills and (4) reinvest emotional
energy in the present. Although these theories are never exact, they can
provide security and add perspective during difficult times.
Time Honored Tips
If assistance in coping with real loss is needed, professional
counseling is helpful. Why go to the dentist twice a year for your teeth
while neglecting your whole being all year? Whether you seek counseling
or not, the following tips will help:
- Grief Work is Not Done Alone - Although the experience of grief is
unique and personal, the process of moving forward is enhanced by
having others around. Whether you share your grief with others or just
have someone listen, social support is essential. Discuss what the
person meant to you.
- Find Ways to Express Your Grief - Expression of grief is healthy
and natural, and it is far more dangerous to try to bottle your
feelings up. Discuss your feelings, cry, or write a letter to the
deceased. This expression is helpful in moving forward.
- Accept Your Feelings of Loss - Denying loss works in the short
term by helping you get through the day. Eventually, and sooner rather
than later, it's a good idea to face your feelings of loss directly.
The only real way out of grief is through it.
- Engage in Activities to Honor the Deceased - If your friend loved
tennis, hold a tennis tournament to honor their memory. If they were
active in your church, have a special prayer dedicated to them. Find
activities which symbolically put you in touch with what the person
meant. Memorials create lasting reminders that are very helpful to
those remaining.
- Reduce Stress - Since you are already likely stressed from your
loss, it's important to monitor this stress and find ways to relax.
Take days off from work if possible, go on vacation, exercise, or
simply increase the number of evenings you play tennis!
Coping with a real loss requires more Mental Equipment than you'll ever
need to win Wimbledon. All the best to the friends and family of Bob
Speed, and to everyone who must learn to live without their friend.
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