Bereavement
Showing Original Post only (View all)quotes on grief [View all]
The reality is that you will grieve forever. You will not get over the loss of a loved one; you will learn to live with it. You will heal and you will rebuild yourself around the loss you have suffered. You will be whole again but you will never be the same. Nor should you be the same nor would you want to.
― Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and John Kessler
Grief does not change you, Hazel. It reveals you.
― John Green, The Fault in Our Stars
There is a sacredness in tears....They are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition and of unspeakable love.
― Washington Irving
You will lose someone you cant live without,and your heart will be badly broken, and the bad news is that you never completely get over the loss of your beloved. But this is also the good news. They live forever in your broken heart that doesnt seal back up. And you come through. Its like having a broken leg that never heals perfectlythat still hurts when the weather gets cold, but you learn to dance with the limp.
― Anne Lamott
Without you in my arms, I feel an emptiness in my soul. I find myself searching the crowds for your face - I know it's an impossibility, but I cannot help myself.
― Nicholas Sparks, Message in a Bottle
When someone you love dies, and you're not expecting it, you don't lose her all at once; you lose her in pieces over a long timethe way the mail stops coming, and her scent fades from the pillows and even from the clothes in her closet and drawers. Gradually, you accumulate the parts of her that are gone. Just when the day comeswhen there's a particular missing part that overwhelms you with the feeling that she's gone, foreverthere comes another day, and another specifically missing part.
― John Irving, A Prayer for Owen Meany
Nature's first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf's a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
― Robert Frost
They say time heals all wounds, but that presumes the source of the grief is finite
― Cassandra Clare, Clockwork Prince
You care so much you feel as though you will bleed to death with the pain of it.
― J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
It's so curious: one can resist tears and 'behave' very well in the hardest hours of grief. But then someone makes you a friendly sign behind a window, or one notices that a flower that was in bud only yesterday has suddenly blossomed, or a letter slips from a drawer... and everything collapses.
― Colette
Grief can be a burden, but also an anchor. You get used to the weight, how it holds you in place.
― Sarah Dessen, The Truth About Forever
There should be a statute of limitation on grief. A rulebook that says it is all right to wake up crying, but only for a month. That after 42 days you will no longer turn with your heart racing, certain you have heard her call out your name. That there will be no fine imposed if you feel the need to clean out her desk; take down her artwork from the refrigerator; turn over a school portrait as you pass - if only because it cuts you fresh again to see it. That it's okay to measure the time she has been gone, the way we once measured her birthdays.
― Jodi Picoult, My Sister's Keeper
It sucks that we miss people like that. You think you've accepted that someone is out of your life, that you've grieved and it's over, and then bam. One little thing, and you feel like you've lost that person all over again.
― Rachel Hawkins, Demonglass
But when I do feel all the strength go out of me, and I fall to my knees beside the table and I think I cry, then, or at least I want to, and everything inside me screams for just one more kiss, one more word, one more glance, one more.
― Veronica Roth, Allegiant
Relationships take up energy; letting go of them, psychiatrists theorize, entails mental work. When you lose someone you were close to, you have to reassess your picture of the world and your place in it. The more your identity was wrapped up with the deceased, the more difficult the loss.
― Meghan O'Rourke
Every widow wakes one morning, perhaps after years of pure and unwavering grieving, to realize she slept a good night's sleep, and will be able to eat breakfast, and doesn't hear her husband's ghost all the time, but only some of the time. Her grief is replaced with a useful sadness. Every parent who loses a child finds a way to laugh again. The timbre begins to fade. The edge dulls. The hurt lessens. Every love is carved from loss. Mine was. Yours is. Your great-great-great-grandchildren's will be. But we learn to live in that love.
― Jonathan Safran Foer, Everything Is Illuminated
So its true, when all is said and done, grief is the price we pay for love.
― E.A. Bucchianeri, Brushstrokes of a Gadfly
And no matter what anybody says about grief and about time healing all wounds, the truth is, there are certain sorrows that never fade away until the heart stops beating and the last breath is taken.
― Tiffanie DeBartolo
Each of us has his own rhythm of suffering.
― Roland Barthes
Life is full of grief, to exactly the degree we allow ourselves to love other people.
― Orson Scott Card, Shadow of the Giant
When one person is missing the whole world seems empty.
― Pat Schweibert, Tear Soup: A Recipe for Healing After Loss
It reminds me that no embrace will ever feel the same again, because no one will ever be like her again, because she's gone. She's gone, and crying feels so useless, so stupid, but it's all I can do.
― Veronica Roth, Allegiant
(6 pages of selected quotes from goodreads dot com)