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Lily Pond's avatar

Anna, your exploration of how tears show up in different times and stages of your grieving adds texture and nuance to our individual and collective experience of crying. Your account of your grief for your father reminds me of my own. The emotions were so complex, conflicting and overwhelming, that I did not shed tears during his last few months, when I was his main caregiver. I think adrenaline and cortisol definitely flooded my system and drove me to handle the critical tasks at hand. I also became deeply depressed. But my eyes were dry. I felt numb. It wasn't until I went back home and received a phone call about his death, that I burst out in unbridled tears. And then tears would come and go in the next few years. I think your article raises a very important point about not judging a person's level of sadness and grief based on the amount of tears they shed. There are simply too many elements at play, and crying is truly an experience unique to each and every one of us.

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Victoria's avatar

It's so helpful to hear your questions, Anna. I feel similarly to you. Questioning myself.

I know my pain and endurance were stretched further and further in the dark days of caregiving, aka numbed. Perhaps this stamina or endurance recalibrates the threshold for tears. Perhaps the tears are not behind a dam, but the stress, cortisol, etc. are more potently concentrated in the smaller amount of tears when they're shed. I think I prefer this thought to being on edge about a dam bursting!

The more we share, the more I see how unique and individual our tears and crying are, especially when they are associated with grief.

On the flip side, I think about recent opportunities to sit in nature and listen to music that felt more poignant and wondrous than before. Are we more sensitised to revel in the joy-filled moment now because we are more potently charged?

No right or wrong. Hoping we experience wonder and joyful tears and lose any worries of when and how we 'release' tears.

Also, one thing I'm aware of is that the more I moved (Walk-run-walked), the less 'keyed up' I felt, so perhaps movement enables a similar release for the body as tears.

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