Making Sense of Tragedy

Copyrighted by Lorna Tedder. Originally published in Third Degree of Truth.

All week,  Shannon’s  been  excited  about  going  to a 15th birthday party tomorrow night. She won’t be going now. Today, the birthday girl committed suicide.

Give Your Life Direction

 

Shannon’s turning everything  over in her head right now, trying to wrap her mind around it and apologizes for not being able to let it go long enough to talk about much else, but such is the process of coping. She’s trying to understand.  So are all their friends.  The  question  is why…but the question is always why.

We talked about grief, about anger directed at the girl, about life purpose,  about the afterlife,  about reincarnation,  about   heaven,  about  whether  those  who  have passed regret  their  actions  or  understand  things  differently, about how one person or one incident  can have such an effect—good  or bad—on someone else. About how  everything  is woven  together  and there  are layers and layers to events and people.

Is this tragedy for nothing? they want to know. Will the  girl’s  death,  while  causing  so  much  hurt,  have  a greater purpose? Will it cause one friend to grow up? Will it cause another to become more focused? Will it simply be forgotten after the years have passed?

Life Coaching Tips

I think for Shannon, if anything,  this death has cemented her desire for a career in counseling and coaching teens.

When faced with a tragedy  we can’t make sense of and no way to make it better, we also cope by looking for anything positive we can find.


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