Writing the Hard Things – A Guest Post by Alise D. Chaffins

If you’ve followed this blog for very long, then you know that grief is a subject I wander back to again and again since my mother died 5 years ago, so when Alise Chaffins released her new book Embracing Grief, I knew I had to read it. . . and it was so helpful, so affirming, and so honest.  Take some time to get to know Alise here today, and then be sure to pick up her book. 

For 18 months, my life was immersed in grief. Death and heartache were my non-stop companions for a year and a half, consuming my thoughts, waking and often sleeping. I lived and breathed grief.

And though it may have seemed counter-productive, I wrote grief as well.

Writing through painful circumstances is, well, painful. There were difficult stories that I needed to revisit. There were past wounds that needed to be reopened. After long days of writing, there were plenty of nights when my husband simply needed to hold me while I cried about the words that had poured out that day.

If you write the hard things, there’s no way to avoid discomfort. Whether it’s because someone tells you that you don’t have a right to tell the stories, or because of the pain of simply retelling them, or because of the risk of vulnerability, you will encounter some kind of hurt when you write difficult words.

So why do it? Here are a few reasons why I choose to continue to write the hard things.

Whether you write about them or not, hard things will happen to you. You can try to push them away, or you can lean into them and allow yourself to experience them completely. I believe that even if we choose not to write about the difficult circumstances, when we pull them close, we become better people, better friends, and better writers.

Alise Chaffins is a wife, mother, eater of soup, and defender of the Oxford comma. She writes about life and grief, and how embracing grief allows for a fuller life. You can follow her online on Facebook and Twitter. She blogs regularly at knittingsoul.com. Her book Embracing Grief: Leaning Into Loss to Find Life is now available.

 

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