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Posts from February 2026

If The Leaves On A Tree

If the leaves on a tree
In the summer sun, growing,
Are one generation,
Do those that are now, alive,
Have in them the memory
Of the ones that fell in the winter?

Do those that are now have dreams
Of those that will bloom next spring?
What do leaves really know for sure
In the autumn of their lives?

Grief! How Do I Do This?

What do most people really know about grief… or how to grieve? Most people know very little. In our society, we most often shy away from the issue of death and most often don’t talk about the horrible pain that we feel when we grieve. We stuff it down, put on a “good face” and act like we’re okay. Inside, we feel confused, frightened, anxious and in emotional pain. The other option that happens is that people shut down, hide away and suffer in silence and aloneness. Neither of these options work very well. They just put grief on hold and cause more suffering.

Sitting With Grief

“When we are brave enough to sit with our pain, it deepens our ability to sit with the pain of others. It shows us how to love them.” — Valarie Kaur

There is an ancient Inuit fable called Skeleton Woman, made popular by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estes, who wrote Women Who Run with the Wolves.

Here is a synopsis: A young woman is thrown into the ocean where she lives for decades as a skeleton. A fisherman casts his line and snags the skeleton. Thinking he has caught a huge fish he eagerly throws out a net and reels it in. The woman tries to disentangle herself from the net but quickly gets more entwined. When the bones emerge, the fisherman screams in terror, grabs his line and flees to his snow house not realizing the woman skeleton is still attached. Later, when he lights his whale-oil lamp, he is surprised to see her all tangled and crumpled on the snow floor. Perhaps the lamplight softens her features, or perhaps he is lonely, but somehow he now sees her in a new way. A feeling of kindness comes over him. Slowly, gently, like a mother toward a child, he untangles her from the fishing line and places the bones carefully back together, covering her with fur to keep her warm. He falls asleep and dreams something sad during the night. A tear falls from his eye. Wanting nothing more than to come back to life, and feeling very thirsty, she reaches over and drinks his tear while he sleeps. She holds his heart, gently beating it as a drum while softly singing. As she does so, her flesh returns and her body is restored. They wake the next morning wrapped around each other in a good and lasting way.

Inuit fables traditionally focus on the cycle of life, death and resurrection. This one also offers a powerful metaphor for what it means to stay with grief rather than flee from it. If we can allow ourselves to stay with difficult feelings like pain and sadness rather than dismiss them, if we can see our suffering and that of another in a warmer light, we can emerge from grief with a greater sense of connection to ourselves and others.