Forevering in Our Hearts
Tukios Websites • July 5, 2008

Please join Cress in supporting the National Pregnancy & Infant Loss Remembrance Day to honor all the families who have lost a baby due to miscarriage, stillbirth, or in early infancy. The event will kick off with inspirational speaker, Kelly Farley, who is a bereaved father himself and founder of the Grieving Dads Project. During the memorial ceremony, each family will have an opportunity to say their baby’s name before the remembrance walk. The walk is followed by a dove release.
Saturday, October 13, 2012 at McKee Farms Park, Fitchburg, WI
Please see www.foreverinourheartsmadison.com for more information.

Writing thank you notes is usually one of the very first “after the funeral” tasks you will undertake. You may be surprised to find that your brain/hand coordination is not working so well. You sit there with pen in hand and well-formed thoughts in your head, but somehow it all gets lost between the head and the paper. Don’t despair. This is normal and it’s all part of the grief journey.

Yesterday, Jane was on duty as a tour guide at a lovely little pre-revolutionary war church in rural Virginia. It was late in the afternoon when a youngish woman wearing shorts and a Cubs ball hat stepped into the visitor’s center looking lost. Thinking that she might need directions, Jane quietly approached to offer her assistance. The seemingly lost young lady said she just wanted to go in the church.

When death is near or has just occurred, there are so many things to do and yet there is nothing you can do. You feel helpless. You can’t make the person well or bring them back. But you know you will, very soon, need to make many decisions about the service, the final resting place, the music, food, flowers, donations, clothing and much more. Your mind is racing and oddly enough, at the same time, at a complete standstill. On one hand it feels like it is too soon to do anything. You’re just not ready. But at the same time, you feel the weight of all that is coming.