
Hello,
As the Coordinator for the UAW/ Ford Bereavement
Committee, I would like to remind everyone at The Cleveland
Manufacturing Site, Ford Motor Company, that the Bereavement
Committee is offering the "Care Notes" booklets. The "Care Notes"
are from One Caring Place, ABBEY Press, St. Meinrad, IN 47577.
These are available for those in the healing
process of bereavement and those of you who are caring for someone
else. Please take the "Care Notes" and share them with Family and
Friends. They are provided for you by your UAW Local#1250 and the
Ford Motor Company.
With permission from "The ABBEY Press" Publication
Customer Service, I am also extending an invitation to everyone to
read the "Care-Notes" I have included. This material is very helpful
to anyone going through a tough time during the holidays.
The topic is
"Getting through the Holidays when you've
Lost a Loved One."
"The holiday's are coming and I'm not sure I'm
ready. I'm not sure I'll ever be ready again. Its winter and I feel
as frozen inside as the landscape outside. I tried making out my
gift list today, but the tears kept getting in the way. It is so
hard to think about gifts and fun and the Holiday's when a loved one
has died.
As I get out the dishes and count the silverware,
I am acutely aware of the empty place at the family table. I'm
trying to find the holiday spirit, but when the family circle has
been broken by death, the only things that sparkle this season are
my tears.
Working your way through:
When you've lost a loved one, the holiday season can be a painful
reminder of the terrible loss you are feeling- instead of bringing
warmth, love, and excitement. The first few years are perhaps the
most difficult, but even years later, the holidays may lack the joy
they once had for you.
There are steps you can take, however to help give
the holidays a new meaning. The holidays can become a time of peace
and reflection, a time to cherish the gift your loved one has
been—and continue to be—in the life of your family. Here are a few
ideas that may help you begin your journey.
Be Patient and realistic.
Sometimes our own expectations of the holidays make the pain and
frustration more acute. We have a mental picture of how things ought
to be. Often, however, those expectations are based more on fantasy
than reality. Remember that you are grieving. Be kind and gentle
with yourself, and realistic about what you expect. Leave the word
ought to out of the holiday season this year.
It is difficult to be realistic while you are
grieving, but it is also an important strategy for health and
well-being. Plan ahead so that you are not over-whelmed by
responsibilities at the last moment. When you are grieving, it is
difficult to concentrate, so make lists. Prioritize things. Decide
what is important to you this holiday season, and scratch the rest
off the list this year. You can always add things back in years to
come.
Listen to your heart and acknowledge your
limits.
Spend some quiet time before the rush of the holidays listening to
your heart. Become aware of your needs and express them to family
members and friends with whom you plan to spend the holidays.
Encourage others to share their feelings, too, so
that everyone affected by the death of your loved one has an
opportunity to express his or her wishes about holiday plans.
Remember that it is O.K. to say no. You do not
have to accept every invitation or fulfill every responsibility that
comes your way this holiday season. Accept invitations and take on
obligations only as you have the energy and the desire to do so.
Make all your "yeses" tentative this year.
Do what you can this holiday season, and let that
be sufficient. If you can't decorate the yard, decorate the house.
If the house seems too big tot tackle, decorate a room, a corner, or
a table. There is nothing wrong with simplicity.
Meanwhile, take care of yourself physically.
Grieving is hard on the body and is a great source of stress. Eat
well and wisely. Avoid the temptation to numb your pain through
overindulgence in the season's many culinary delights. You will only
feel worse later.
At the same time, do not deny yourself the
pleasures of good food and companionship out of a sense of
obligation to the deceased. Remember that your loved one would want
to see you smiling, happy, and surrounded by those who you hold
dear.
Exercise is an important stress reliever and a
healthy mood elevator. Make time for exercise and rest so that your
grief is not compounded by exhaustion or overwork. If you listen
well to what your heart and your body is telling you, the holidays
will pass more peacefully.
Adapt cherished traditions.
When loss and grief overwhelm us at the holidays, we are sometimes
tempted to scrap the whole thing, to do absolutely nothing. But you
can keep traditions alive in ways that make sense given the new
reality of your life.
For instance, if the fact that you won't be buying
a gift for your departed loved one this year saddens you; buy a
simple gift that you know he or she would have liked and give it to
someone who otherwise would not have a gift. Many charities are
eager to accept such gifts at this time of year, and some will even
arrange for you to present the gift in person if you wish. Remember
that it is the exchange of love—the giving—that matters most.
Hang stockings by the fireplace if you wish; place
a wreath on the grave if that seems appropriate. Do whatever feels
right for you and your family. Try a new twist on old
traditions—have Christmas dinner on Christmas Eve, open presents on
New Year's Day or on the sixth of January, as is done in some
traditions.
If you are alone this year as a result of your
loss, find a way to share a part of the holidays with others. Visit
a soup kitchen or stop by a nursing home. You may find yourself
forging new bonds out of shared losses.
Allow the tears to come, but look for joy
amidst the pain.
AS you unpack and sift through holiday decorations, understand that
along with the warm, loving, memories, you will be unpacking some
heartaches as well. Don't deny yourself the gift of healing tears.
Lay in a supply of tissue and don't be surprised if you find tears
coming when you least expect them.
Sometimes all we can remember are the painful
details surrounding our loved one's death. This holiday season try
also to remember all the wonderful moments of your loved one's life.
Think of all the gifts your loved one has given to you—joy,
laughter, affection, companionship.
Write these gifts on strips of paper. Put them in
a gift box or place them in a stocking. Decorate the tree with them
or keep them in a memory book or a private drawer. What ever choice
you make, you will be celebrating the joy your loved one has brought
into your life
Focus on the spiritual dimension of the
holidays.
When you are ready, and it feels right, one way to refashion the
holidays is to focus on the underlying religious meaning. In the
Christian tradition, Advent can be a time of quiet reflection and
spiritual preparation. Let this season of hopeful anticipation touch
the yearning within your heart for a final reunion with your loved
one in the life to come.
In this season of light, remember the light your
loved one has brought to your life. Light a special candle—not in
memory of a death, but in celebration of a life and a love shared.
Spend a moment in a quiet prayer of thanksgiving for having loved
and been loved by this person.
Holidays of other faith traditions are also
steeped in religious significance. However you observe the season
let your grief lead you to a deeper appreciation for the
time-honored traditions of the holiday season, traditions that bring
home the meaning of God's promise of everlasting love and life.
Take Heart
Right now, you may feel like the scattered pieces of a broken
puzzle. Honor that feeling, but also take comfort in knowing that
the pieces of the puzzle can be reshuffled, rearranged, and pieced
together to form a new picture. As you learn to create a new reality
for yourself, temper your expectations with compassion and
gentleness. You will heal, but only as you allow yourself to
experience the full range of emotion on your journey through grief.
I know the pain of moving through the holidays
after death of a loved one, but slowly, gently, I have begun to
focus on my loved one's life-not the death-and that has made all the
difference."
May love be what you, too, remember the
most.
Betty Yafanaro
UAW Local#1250 Bereavement Coordinator

As the Coordinator for the UAW/ Ford Bereavement
Committee, I would like to say thank you to our UAW Local 1250
website readers.
This year we have been able to offer new "CARE
NOTES" through out the site for anyone. These "CARE NOTES" are small
booklets with some powerful material to help anyone going through
difficult times. Most booklet titles are grief related, others
topics support various issues. Please pick one up and read it and
also consider sharing these with a relative or friend during a
difficult time.
Our Bereavement Committee is made up of both UAW
Local 1250 Members and Ford Motor Company salaried employees.
►Committee Members◄
We have been a committee since July 1999. Working together we have
developed a process in support of employees who have had a loss due
to death to let them know that their fellow employees care. ►Bereavement Process◄
We have developed a process to contact a Bereavement Committee
Member, ►Contact Numbers◄
post the bereavement notice within the site ►example◄
and send a card to the bereaved. On our website we will provide the
names of the active employees at our site who have passed away. This
information will be on the website the quarterly ►Quarterly Deaths◄.
We are very proud to have members of the
Chaplaincy Committee and the ESSP Committee working together on this
team. Please browse through their web pages to see the benefits that
are offered:
►ESSP Committee◄
and
►Chaplaincy Committee◄.
We have also included some information about local Bereavement
Support Groups through Hospice of the Western Reserve Center located
at 300 East 185th Street Cleveland, Ohio.
►Bereavement Support Groups◄
From The Hospice of the Western Reserve, The Elizabeth Severance
Prentiss Foundation has a quarterly publication that includes a
Poetry Corner. I have included the poem for this quarter. ►Poetry◄
I have also included "TEN guidelines to dealing with death." ►Guidelines◄
We invite you to submit poetry to start a "Poetry Corner" on our
site.
We welcome any suggestions from our fellow
employees as to how we can better reach the person who is grieving.
Please look through our site and feel free to contact any one of our
Bereavement Committee members.
Respectfully yours,
Betty Yafanaro
Bereavement Committee Coordinator