‘Five weeks after Dorothy died, my nephew was born. I was so happy he was here, but was also happy he lived across the country so I didn’t have to see him yet. ‘And,’ she replied.’

More Stories like:

“Five weeks after Dorothy died, my nephew was born.

When I went to therapy that week, I shared the news with our therapist. Of course, she wanted to know how I was feeling about his arrival. I replied that I was so happy that he was safely here, but I was also happy that he lived across the country, so I didn’t have to see him yet.

‘And.’ she replied.

I looked at her puzzled, so she continued. ‘And. You are happy he is here AND you are happy that you don’t have to see him right now. Rachel, you don’t have to choose.’

Advertisement

After we left our session that day, I couldn’t stop thinking about that one little word. Ever since Dorothy’s death, I had found myself trying to separate my reemerging feelings of happiness from the steady depression I was in.

Much like a child trying to keep their peas from touching their mashed potatoes, I wanted my feelings of devastation to be untouched by any glimmers of joy I might be feeling. I didn’t think it was possible for them to co-exist. Three simple letters changed that.

I began testing out this powerful little word. Whenever I had been feeling differing emotions, I had used the word ‘but’ to keep them distant. What if I used ‘and’ to bring them together?

It’s a beautiful day outside AND I just can’t face the world today.

Advertisement

That new picture of my nephew is so adorable AND it reminds me of how much I miss Dorothy.

I’m looking forward to seeing my family AND I’m anxious to be around them.

I want to talk about Dorothy AND I’m nervous about what others will have to say about her.

‘And’ was slowly changing my world.

Advertisement

That one word was giving me the freedom to experience the storm of emotions that had been quietly raging inside. I didn’t have to wait for each feeling to pass over me completely, I could start feeling them in connection.

Before ‘and’ there had been so much guilt about the happiness that was sneaking it way back into my life. Now, I had permission to let that happiness start to color the darkness of my grief.

Over the next weeks and months I exercised the power of ‘and.’ With the recent birth of my nephew, I found many opportunities to use my new magic word.

I’m so happy that my sister-in-law is a mother AND I wish that was me.

Advertisement

I want to send my nephew this cute new outfit AND I wish I could be buying clothes for my own child instead.

I want to be included in my nephew’s life AND sometimes it’s just too hard.

I’m so excited to be an aunt AND I’m so worried that Dorothy is going to be forgotten.

It wasn’t a solution or a remedy, but it was a tool.

Advertisement

The burden of Dorothy’s death was a heavy one. I was struggling under the weight of the emotions I had been trying to ignore and I needed help. My grief for Dorothy was never going away, but I needed something to help me carry the load throughout my life. Without a tool, I was going to be crushed.

‘And’ helped alleviate some of the pressure. I felt like I could breathe again.

I felt like I was remembering how to live AND love.”

Wooden "and" symbol sitting on staircase to remind woman to live and love

Advertisement

This story was submitted to Love What Matters by Rachel Whalen of An Unexpected Family Outing. The article originally appeared here. Submit your story here, and be sure to subscribe to our best love stories here.

Provide beauty and strength for other moms.  SHARE this story on Facebook with your friends and family.

Subscribe to our Living Better newsletter.

Your ultimate guide for actionable insights, evidence-backed advice, and captivating personal stories propelling you towards a more fulfilling life.

     Share  Tweet
    Logo

    Looks like your ad blocker is on.

    ×

    We rely on ads to keep creating quality content for you to enjoy for free.

    Please support our site by disabling your ad blocker.

    Continue without supporting us

    Choose your Ad Blocker

    • Adblock Plus
    • Adblock
    • Adguard
    • Ad Remover
    • Brave
    • Ghostery
    • uBlock Origin
    • uBlock
    • UltraBlock
    • Other
    1. In the extension bar, click the AdBlock Plus icon
    2. Click the large blue toggle for this website
    3. Click refresh
    1. In the extension bar, click the AdBlock icon
    2. Under "Pause on this site" click "Always"
    1. In the extension bar, click on the Adguard icon
    2. Click on the large green toggle for this website
    1. In the extension bar, click on the Ad Remover icon
    2. Click "Disable on This Website"
    1. In the extension bar, click on the orange lion icon
    2. Click the toggle on the top right, shifting from "Up" to "Down"
    1. In the extension bar, click on the Ghostery icon
    2. Click the "Anti-Tracking" shield so it says "Off"
    3. Click the "Ad-Blocking" stop sign so it says "Off"
    4. Refresh the page
    1. In the extension bar, click on the uBlock Origin icon
    2. Click on the big, blue power button
    3. Refresh the page
    1. In the extension bar, click on the uBlock icon
    2. Click on the big, blue power button
    3. Refresh the page
    1. In the extension bar, click on the UltraBlock icon
    2. Check the "Disable UltraBlock" checkbox
    1. Please disable your Ad Blocker
    2. Disable any DNS blocking tools such as AdGuardDNS or NextDNS

    If the prompt is still appearing, please disable any tools or services you are using that block internet ads (e.g. DNS Servers).