herbavore
Bluelight Crew
I’m trying to figure out how to deal with guilt. At my son’s memorial the first words I spoke were about guilt—about how useless and pointless an emotion it was. I was directing it at his friends, his best friend, and his brother. All I could think about was how they might feel terrible forever about introducing him to drugs, giving him drugs, abandoning him when his addiction got so out of control, and even perhaps providing the dose that killed him. I wanted them to live, to learn from Caleb but to survive and flourish themselves, not be crippled by guilt. I was also directing it at my husband who I knew would turn his grief inward and try to shoulder the blame himself. I was so intent on combating this destructive force for them that I was completely blindsided when it came hunting for me.
Once again I have to concede that the rational is often no match for the emotional.
So now that it is my turn to see the world the way guilt paints it, I am completely humbled by the vision.
Here is the vision for me: My son lost his life because I failed him as a mother. I failed to equip him with the internal tools he would need to face the pain in life. I failed to protect him from the pain in life. I failed to do what every parent is charged with doing: protecting my child.
Even when I write all that nonsense I am simultaneously typing the rebuttal in my head!
I don’t need reassurance because I get that everywhere I turn. I am not ungrateful; I really do appreciate that support and all the caring empathy behind it. It’s just that I still have these feelings and I know it is only going to be my own hard work that banishes them (or teaches me how to live with them?)
I posted this because I see a lot of other people here suffering from guilt: guilt about addiction, guilt about who they are, or aren’t or what they haven’t achieved. Guilt about failure finds many soft spots!
So my hope is to elicit responses on how you deal with guilt. What is most effective for you? The Buddhist way is to welcome all negative emotions as life’s greatest teachers. What does guilt teach ?
Mods, I have no idea if this is better off a blog or a TDS thread.
Once again I have to concede that the rational is often no match for the emotional.
So now that it is my turn to see the world the way guilt paints it, I am completely humbled by the vision.
Here is the vision for me: My son lost his life because I failed him as a mother. I failed to equip him with the internal tools he would need to face the pain in life. I failed to protect him from the pain in life. I failed to do what every parent is charged with doing: protecting my child.
Even when I write all that nonsense I am simultaneously typing the rebuttal in my head!
I don’t need reassurance because I get that everywhere I turn. I am not ungrateful; I really do appreciate that support and all the caring empathy behind it. It’s just that I still have these feelings and I know it is only going to be my own hard work that banishes them (or teaches me how to live with them?)
I posted this because I see a lot of other people here suffering from guilt: guilt about addiction, guilt about who they are, or aren’t or what they haven’t achieved. Guilt about failure finds many soft spots!
So my hope is to elicit responses on how you deal with guilt. What is most effective for you? The Buddhist way is to welcome all negative emotions as life’s greatest teachers. What does guilt teach ?
Mods, I have no idea if this is better off a blog or a TDS thread.

