When your dreams die

Grief isn't one-size-fits-all, and it's the nuance between the types that causes many people to stay stuck.
There are two types of grief: regular grief when you lose something you had, and ambiguous grief when you realize you'll never have something you always wanted.
Ambiguous grief is real and can be just as painful and I'm going to help you walk through that in this video.
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Here's what you'll find in this video:
00:00 Two Types of Grief: Regular and Ambiguous
There are two types of grief - regular grief, which occurs when you lose something you once had, and ambiguous grief, which is the realization that something you always thought you'd have will never come to be. Ambiguous grief can be as devastating as regular grief, and it often goes unrecognized by the world. It's like mourning the loss of an alternate version of yourself that will never exist.
04:02 Healing from Grief
Both regular and ambiguous grief can heal over time through a combination of time passing and the expression of grief. It's important to feel and express your emotions naturally. Grief doesn't follow a linear path and comes in waves, so it's crucial to allow these emotions to come and go. Avoid rushing the healing process and remember that it's okay to take emotional breaks when the grief fades temporarily.
08:15 Ceremonies and Closure
While traditional ceremonies like funerals help provide closure for regular grief, ambiguous grief often lacks such closure. To cope with ambiguous loss, consider creating your own form of ceremony or acknowledgment to signify the finality of your dream or expectation. Closure is essential to moving forward and preventing prolonged denial and limbo states.
12:15 Avoiding the Pitfalls of Comparison
Comparing your ambiguous grief to others' situations can lead to negative emotions and hinder your healing process. Avoid the impulse to compare, as it will only make you feel angry and hurt. Each person's experience is unique, and comparing yourself to others won't bring you closer to healing or closure. Fight back against the urge to compare your situation with others.

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  • @LovinLnCottage
    @LovinLnCottage7 ай бұрын

    Google served this video to me this morning and it hit me in my very soul. I spent 2 years in grief therapy with a LCSW and this never came up. The death of my dream hit me so hard that I immediately buried it and it wasn’t acknowledged in any way. It has devastated my life since then. I will hold a ceremony for it now. Thank you for this immensely important video. I feel that you are touching a great many lives with it. 🙏🏻☮️❤️

  • @dbostrander

    @dbostrander

    7 ай бұрын

    Same here. 🥰

  • @torreycat7714

    @torreycat7714

    7 ай бұрын

    Life coach Iyanla Vanzaant said, “Feelings, buried alive, never die.”

  • @heathernewsom921

    @heathernewsom921

    7 ай бұрын

    THIS is how I feel about my career in the film business in an incredibly misogynistic embedded field . 30 years of men I work with, with protected privileged nepotism backgrounds, and historic relationships with powerful creatives. I have worked with around and through this issue for 30 years . Trapped under the glass ceiling, in a pool of depression now feeling like I’m drowning. Being ignored- and feeling that jealous competition from people who should be lifting you up , but teaming up with others likeminded to bring you down, and sometimes sabotaging you to get you fired. I love what I do, and hoped to be a gaffer or lighting designer . In films - I’m not exaggerating- there are 15 female gaffers . And typically under 100 . Woman who are in my union of set Lighting Technicians in Hollywood, out of a membership of 2500 people in our workforce. Hardly any female directors of photography. On the occasions I do get to work with strong talented woman, they get less resources, and less authority to keep our work safe, essentially setting woman up to fail by undermining their leadership. I would love to add we have come along way since the beginning of my career, but that unreachable place is a painful reality.

  • @vickykent353

    @vickykent353

    7 ай бұрын

    He definitely is. In the first video of his that I saw, he validated my feelings of passive suicidal ideation that I thought were unique to only me. What a relief I felt. It's helped me begin to look it square in the face. One week after that, I got a new therapist and told her about it almost immediately. Just having a name for it somehow made me feel freer and lighter.

  • @trog69

    @trog69

    7 ай бұрын

    True for me as well, but I found out about it after being forced to retire early. Now, just a picture of a middle-class home and surroundings is enough to start me off wanting to cry at the loss. Can't explain it any more than that. It feels like just more weakness on my part, somehow.

  • @NotoriousPND429
    @NotoriousPND4297 ай бұрын

    Thank you for acknowledging this. I get so sick of hearing people say "it's never too late!" Enough of toxic positivity. Sometimes it really is too late, sometimes we have missed our window of opportunity and we just have to mourn that loss.

  • @diletante6800

    @diletante6800

    7 ай бұрын

    Perfect.

  • @pinecone1321

    @pinecone1321

    7 ай бұрын

    I've learned silence is better than catchy affirmations. People do have good intentions for the best though.

  • @anitas5817

    @anitas5817

    7 ай бұрын

    This is so true.

  • @catitude4

    @catitude4

    7 ай бұрын

    Another one is "Never give up", well sometimes you have to know when you're on the Titanic.

  • @Hard_Car_Life

    @Hard_Car_Life

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you! Yes! It is too late! I've never thought of that term "toxic positivity!" People still telling me to go back to school at 66 to become a nurse. Something I always wanted to do but never found the time, living on my own and working shitty paying jobs. Just couldn't figure out how to do it. But here are people with that toxic positivity telling me "it's never too late!" YES IT IS TOO LATE!!!

  • @counseloridealist
    @counseloridealist6 ай бұрын

    I’ve known about this for a long time. Soren Kierkegaard once said ,”the most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly one you can never have”.

  • @ilovesunvalley

    @ilovesunvalley

    5 ай бұрын

    That is an incredible statement.

  • @reereekennedy3211

    @reereekennedy3211

    3 ай бұрын

    Maybe ones dreams need to be reorganized, and redspun. That's why I feel in love with Buddhism ALL LIFE IS SUFFERING! Getting that out of the way helps to be realistic.

  • @zacky7572

    @zacky7572

    3 ай бұрын

    Wouldn’t Buddhism tell you to not have dreams? Dreams are desires, and desires creates suffering. Wouldn’t Buddhism tell you to simply exist and accept?

  • @grmpEqweer

    @grmpEqweer

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@zacky7572 I think so. I sort of try to borrow a lot from Buddhism.

  • @UnLugubreEquivoco

    @UnLugubreEquivoco

    2 ай бұрын

    ouch, this hurts.

  • @todddanforth8853
    @todddanforth88533 ай бұрын

    Pink Floyd lyrics I have long identified with: "The child has grown, the dream is gone; I have become comfortably numb."

  • @zxyatiywariii8

    @zxyatiywariii8

    12 күн бұрын

    I wish I _could_ become comfortably numb. . .

  • @1legend517

    @1legend517

    7 сағат бұрын

    This is so true. I've become more and more dead inside the older that I get.

  • @robertmaccreight4910
    @robertmaccreight4910Ай бұрын

    You are spot on! I get sick and tired of people say when one door closes,another one opens:that new door never opened for me

  • @timmotel5804

    @timmotel5804

    22 күн бұрын

    Good Day. However, if you don't die, then, each new day IS a "New Door", in it's own way. Kinda. I almost gave up once. Atleast, for me, I'm glad that I didn't. (atleast- should be one word. Fire should be spelt Fier. Lower case i looks better to me than I when referring to Myself.) Peace and Best Regards.

  • @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    15 күн бұрын

    They forgot to add that the door that closed is the only one in the room you are in.

  • @timmotel5804

    @timmotel5804

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Thenogomogo-zo3un Yes. I see your point. Thank You.

  • @1legend517

    @1legend517

    4 күн бұрын

    Exactly! Thank you. A "new door" never opened for me either. They've all shut me out and locked in my face.

  • @user-wm2fv3sp3x
    @user-wm2fv3sp3x7 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I am 58 and I don't know what I really grieving for. I just feel my life has passed me by.

  • @loubieloujones5698

    @loubieloujones5698

    3 ай бұрын

    I can totally relate. I hope you find new dreams x

  • @TheJoker6789

    @TheJoker6789

    3 ай бұрын

    I am 58 also. And the last four years of my life have beat me down so much. I have given up on all of my dreams and so-called bucket list of things I wanted to do before I die. I do lately feel like there is a chance I will pull out of this depression and enjoy life again more than I don't. I have a bad habit of holding on to all the bullshit. And taking for granite anything good that happens.

  • @reereekennedy3211

    @reereekennedy3211

    3 ай бұрын

    It is said that when we find ourselves in this position, we should strive to let go of the world and focus on our inner self. I am 59 and only now look and become aware of those things I thought would happen. Read some philosophy or like u did fill your mind with useful things made only for u. You will recognize the words, and you will find comfort in all these losses. I think from here on out loss will try to take the wheel. F*c# that. Peace to u and those u love.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @suzm3751

    @suzm3751

    3 ай бұрын

    At 57 I began also down this path of grief and had no clue what I was dealing with. It seems like depression yes, but it is a true grief. Is the common in women at this age more than men?

  • @BetaBuxDelux

    @BetaBuxDelux

    3 ай бұрын

    @@reereekennedy3211I’m 46 and am probably Autistic. I feel similarly. However, I have learned to value peace.

  • @belindamclaughlin9258
    @belindamclaughlin92587 ай бұрын

    It's good to finally have a name for this anguish in my soul. I am a 63-year-old childless widow. Infertility is so very cruel. For all the years that my husband and I tried to have children, I emotionally went through a funeral every month when I learned that I was still not pregnant. Then I hit menopause about 10 years early, only worsening my heartache as I learned my dream of being a mother was gone forever. Only my own sweet mother seemed to understand my hurt, and now she's gone, too. Literally no one else understands the pain I feel as I face old age alone, with no children or grandchildren to love -- or to love me. Now maybe I can work on this ambiguous grief. Thank you.

  • @sciencemeetsart

    @sciencemeetsart

    7 ай бұрын

    You are absolutely not alone. I understand your pain.

  • @pipfox7834

    @pipfox7834

    7 ай бұрын

    You're never alone if you're always on the lookout for ways to be of help to others. I'm your age and similar situation, but have focussed more on looking outward rather than inward at my sorrows. This, and a great thankfulness for all the things I *do have* has made my life full and interesting, with enough friends and acquaintances to provide an important sense of belonging. Find ways to make a difference to others, that is the secret. Joy comes to fill those moments that were spent on *why me* thoughts. Life is meant to be a daring adventure, or it's nothing (Helen Keller). It's up to you to decide which kind of life YOU will create - your choice can change everything for the better.

  • @Americandream805

    @Americandream805

    7 ай бұрын

    🙏

  • @Americandream805

    @Americandream805

    7 ай бұрын

    @@pipfox7834 Great advice to look outward. 🙏

  • @sarahmunromaddonna6264

    @sarahmunromaddonna6264

    6 ай бұрын

    I am a single mom of three. My ex husband abandoned me and our kids. I hurt so much for my kids because they deserved to have a dad. I just wanted to tell you, there are so many single moms out there who have kids but nobody to share them with. My kids, aside from me and my aging parents, have nobody. You could be family to someone like me and my kids. It hurts being so isolated and not having others who can know, love and appreciate my kids with me. I know it isn't the same as having your own babies. ❤️❤️ I can only explain from my perspective. how much value I would gain from someone like you just caring. Family doesn't have to be blood. And you still have the ability to have so much influence and value in some kid's life. Also, (again, I know it isn't the same) have you considered adoption? I can't imagine how much an adopted child would appreciate the opportunity to grow up in a safe, loving family with parents who genuinely wanted them. Some of the people I consider the best parent material (and most compassionate and caring) cannot have children and I believe they were meant to sow their love much further than a small family of their own. When you have your own family your sights are narrowed, sometimes you are consumed with stress and survival. You don't have extra to "share". Don't think because you don't have your own that your impact is wasted. You might have such a vital role to play in a child's life at some point. ❤❤❤

  • @catherineferguson8452
    @catherineferguson84522 ай бұрын

    Omg this is what I needed!! I retired in September. Only because work was toxic and it hit hard!!! My retirement dream didn’t look like this!!! I’m alone!! Not the cottage by the lake, not the winters in the south. No. Alone. My son moved away at the same time for love. My only family was now gone! What a winter! Devastated! So needed to find you!! Thank you!!!

  • @micahrutland9021

    @micahrutland9021

    2 ай бұрын

    You'll make it buddy. Get out there and find something/someone. Just wing it. Could be fun.

  • @anniethenonnymouse

    @anniethenonnymouse

    2 ай бұрын

    I hear you. I see you. You are not alone. 🐝 Blessed Bee

  • @user-ff8vo1se8v

    @user-ff8vo1se8v

    2 ай бұрын

    Annie, is that from SNL 😊

  • @TheLoneMitten

    @TheLoneMitten

    2 ай бұрын

    Where do you live? Maybe we can help each other.

  • @heaven7360

    @heaven7360

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes one has to fill retirement time with growth or else it becomes a wasteland of time. I felt so strange that I had to create a whole new me..a whole new identity, self image. I still have anxiety over it. Now I find myself completely alone...not any children or family. I've had close friends but they've died or moved away or drifted away. I'm not sure what to do. I probably would evaporate if I didn't have my birds and my aquariums and some other interests. I think curiosity and imagination can help a person and to not think of the past or future is a tool that is helpful. I hope you've found your way and if you have ideas that have helped you it'd be great if you'd share..BEST!!

  • @user-ij6uy5eo5h
    @user-ij6uy5eo5h2 ай бұрын

    It feels like all of my dreams have died, some in an instant, others from a long, lingering demise. Social occasions are the worst, when friends and family gather to celebrate milestones and I have to put on a happy face while wishing I was somewhere--anywhere--else.

  • @peggymerritt9019

    @peggymerritt9019

    17 күн бұрын

    I have no family or friends left. Isolated & so alone. Please, don't let that happen to you! I blinked once, realized 15 looong years were just "poof" gone forever. You dive back into life, soon as possible. Please, don't wait❤

  • @1legend517

    @1legend517

    11 күн бұрын

    I feel like that every single year and it's only getting worse. I no longer want to care about or even acknowledge birthdays.

  • @barbaraschain9260

    @barbaraschain9260

    4 күн бұрын

    So many of us can agree. This has been my whole life & i am 66 now. I figure it must be my destined journey but it's so hard to accept. 😢

  • @user-ij6uy5eo5h

    @user-ij6uy5eo5h

    3 күн бұрын

    @@peggymerritt9019 You too. I know it sounds like a bit of a cliché, but joining a group with similar interests can often help. I joined a writing group a few years back and had some interesting experiences. I think it was a site called Meet Up. Doing things for others, volunteering somewhere can be a break from your own thoughts. I always feel a bit better when I'm helping those who truly need it. I have a cat, too. Sometimes it's just nice to know she's waiting for me to come home, and not to an empty apartment. I don't know if any of this helps, but I hope so.

  • @user-ij6uy5eo5h

    @user-ij6uy5eo5h

    3 күн бұрын

    @@barbaraschain9260 Perhaps so, but I don't know. I'm 64 and I've lost a few very close friends, one drank himself to death from PTSD and the other who probably will too, and a sister who passed away from cancer. I do have a very close female friend, and sometimes she's the only one who keeps me relatively sane and on this side of the grass, so to speak. I find that trying to do things for others helps and I do a lot of writing which helps get my feeling out, and getting into my head that way helps get me out of my head, assuming that makes any sense. Meet Up is a good way to finds others with similar interests. I hope that helps.

  • @MariamPareArt
    @MariamPareArt7 ай бұрын

    As a person who had a spinal cord injury (shot in the back and paralyzed) and became a quadriplegic at 20 years old, I feel like I know a lot about ambiguous grief.

  • @meshell1399

    @meshell1399

    7 ай бұрын

    Wow" I'm so sorry to hear that.hope your doing okay :)

  • @angiea8022

    @angiea8022

    7 ай бұрын

    Not what you planned, not what you chose. Most people will never be able to understand your constant disappointments and daily mental and physical struggles. Love and prayers to you on your journey.

  • @lahaza6515

    @lahaza6515

    7 ай бұрын

    I bet you do and God bless you. Are there things you've found that you feel passionate about in that time? I know that sounds simplistic, but sometimes thinking about the things we felt passionate about as kids (like art, reading, animals, music) and spending time delving into one of them.

  • @annelbeab8124

    @annelbeab8124

    7 ай бұрын

    And how do you deal with it ? I saw it first hand in one of my closest friend due to illness (so no other human involved) and eventually after many years she didn't make it physically. I assume the battle phase and the one were the results are clear and constant have their own challenges and that's often maybe overlooked by others. The outside is often on board during drama, but not the silent drama.

  • @lindainglima1961

    @lindainglima1961

    7 ай бұрын

    OMG 😢, my apologies for your suffering. Ambiguous grief is real. I've been in it for the last 20-plus years. Hugs 🫂 and love ❤️ to you.

  • @debiulmer3672
    @debiulmer36727 ай бұрын

    I am a 62-year-old woman, and when I stopped grieving the life, I thought I would have, and started living the life that I do have I realized how wonderful it really is!

  • @hankaul6256

    @hankaul6256

    7 ай бұрын

    Life can really be a shit hole! Hopefully it’ll change soon but probably won’t. Wow, I’m so positive.

  • @Bassynater2500

    @Bassynater2500

    7 ай бұрын

    Beautifully said

  • @truthseek3017

    @truthseek3017

    7 ай бұрын

    DREAM or NIGHTMARE

  • @sandspar

    @sandspar

    7 ай бұрын

    One question, do you pay rent?

  • @harper_anne2089

    @harper_anne2089

    7 ай бұрын

    I am truly happy for you, debiulmer. I will get there. Thank you for the encouraging words 💗

  • @rainwhite866
    @rainwhite8663 ай бұрын

    There is liberation in abandoning 'hope' letting go of the illusion of what never was and surrendering to what your life is now as it is. 🙏

  • @InJusticeAustralia

    @InJusticeAustralia

    2 ай бұрын

    beautiful

  • @davidtiessen7713

    @davidtiessen7713

    2 ай бұрын

    Bingo. There are many ways to be happy. Don't dwell on that which did not happen. That was yesterday. Its not about attaining. Its about enjoying life.

  • @Mgc3270
    @Mgc32703 ай бұрын

    So true. Depression is the loss of illusions.

  • @conniefoxx9813
    @conniefoxx98137 ай бұрын

    Came across this by accident, started listening, and with the words "...basically feels like you are grieving the loss of an alternate universe version of yourself that is never going to be allowed to exist... " my eyes started to tear up. Suddenly I feel like what I've been feeling has been identified.

  • @acerjuglans383

    @acerjuglans383

    6 ай бұрын

    Same here. I'm sorry you feel it too.

  • @barbaraseidel4342

    @barbaraseidel4342

    3 ай бұрын

    Me too❤

  • @1legend517

    @1legend517

    2 ай бұрын

    I feel this as well

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    2 ай бұрын

    I've had the same view of my own life. It seems outrageous that that alternate Universe isn't the actual one. I've thought of trying to write a memoir of the life I never had. It wouldn't be a fantasy. It would be realistic. But it would be much less awful than my reality.

  • @charliesmith_

    @charliesmith_

    Ай бұрын

    We shared the tears. That was a moment of shared healing from being heard. No small thing. We're definitely 'not alone'. We're here. x

  • @GoinDownhill361
    @GoinDownhill3617 ай бұрын

    I'm 50. I always dreamed of being a successful person when I came to this age: happily married, with kids and a good job I like to go to. I failed at everything. All my siblings have that, and I'm the only one in the family who derailed. And it hurts back every now and again. I suppose that being the failure of the family is a burden heavier than I thought. Thanks for your words. They're helpful.

  • @888jucu

    @888jucu

    7 ай бұрын

    Dude you just described me, Im 52 youngest sibling and feel the same such that its sometimes hard to bring myself to special family dinners like Xmas etc

  • @sunnybrett

    @sunnybrett

    7 ай бұрын

    I am YOU! There are many of us out there. Silently sobbing. Moving along,

  • @matthewenriquez1629

    @matthewenriquez1629

    7 ай бұрын

    You must go on, you must say words as long as there are any. In the silence you don't know, you must go on, you can't go on, yet you do go on. If you think you can go on, you can and will. That's the only comfort you get in our cruel world.

  • @oldfogey4679

    @oldfogey4679

    7 ай бұрын

    Carducho I'm in ur boat but I'm not quitting I believe it's never to late to start anew! I'm using my siblings scorn as a motivator! I also know that love is worth more than any monetary success!

  • @esperanzamunoz2725

    @esperanzamunoz2725

    7 ай бұрын

    There's honour in doing the best job you can do. Even if it's not what you'd rather be doing. There are millions of people here who do the jobs most wouldn't want. Garbage collection, early morning street cleaning, house cleaning ect. The happy ones whistle while they work.

  • @Willow-of-the-Wind
    @Willow-of-the-WindАй бұрын

    Thank you 🙏🏻 The hardest part of grieving a dream is letting go of the desire to chase it. It’s done, I’m not physically able to do it and no amount spent on manifesting tutorials will magically pop it into existence.

  • @UnLugubreEquivoco
    @UnLugubreEquivoco4 ай бұрын

    I've never had a love story. It may sound weird but that's how it is. I'm 40 and honestly this has been so helpful. I should just be grieving the young and beautiful love story I never had instead of chasing something impossible. And I'm so tired of people saying "It's never too late" or "It will come when you least expect it", I'm tired. I'm done. That's just it. And honestly, I should have my time of grieving and acceptance instead of this zombie-like situation. And just accept it. Thank you for this.

  • @dreamy_druid

    @dreamy_druid

    2 ай бұрын

    I can relate so well! I’m 46 and my love life has been a complete train wreck to put it mildly. The older I get, the more I realize I’ll never have that storybook romance of meeting someone, falling in love, getting married, and growing old together. Definitely missed my chance a raising kids with someone. I was a single mother and my kids are all adults with families of their own. I too am tired of hearing “in Gods time” or “it’s never too late “. It really is too late for some things.

  • @UnLugubreEquivoco

    @UnLugubreEquivoco

    2 ай бұрын

    @@dreamy_druid right?? Exactly! I mean I'm sure there's still things we can do at our ages and have fun, find meaning, create something beautiful, do art, travel, etc., but we should normalize do that and not wait for "the one". Honestly if I could just write, keep doing my job and read a good book from time to time without having to chase "love" I'd be so much happier.

  • @Bleepbloopblarp

    @Bleepbloopblarp

    2 ай бұрын

    I feel this so much! I’m 45, never married, 2 long term relationships with avoidant and emotionally unavailable partners and now a single Mum. Dating sites are a joke and full of toxicity. I’ve given up on my love story. I’m currently working on being the best version of myself and finding happiness in solitude. I’m enjoying the peace, it feels good to let go of that dream.

  • @sonjak8265

    @sonjak8265

    2 ай бұрын

    Love stories are rare. And after a love story, half of marriages end in divorce. So, grow up, do your duty, and enjoy what you have. Have a love story with yourself.

  • @scottsound4711

    @scottsound4711

    2 ай бұрын

    @@sonjak8265Think you should grow up , & don’t live under a rock go find love it’s never too late 😊

  • @10ACGal4Ever
    @10ACGal4Ever7 ай бұрын

    Several years ago after a major disappointment in my family, I realized “Life is the dying of dreams continually”. We all have expectations in life that don’t come to fruition.

  • @andrewoakeshott7759

    @andrewoakeshott7759

    7 ай бұрын

    I think there’s a lot of truth in this video, but I don’t like how it’s emboldened a lot of useless negativity in the comment section. The truth is, life is neither good nor bad, it just is. It’s true that if one was shielded of life’s vicious sides when young or on the other hand, chose to escape into a dream world, to tolerate a reality to painful to experience, then facing reality can be a kick to the stomach. Perhaps dreams per se are more often than not quite damaging. Why? Because they’re abstract, grandiose and all too often, impossible. But aspiration has always been a core part of being human and a driver of progress. So, I think the key to a fulfilling life, whatever cards your dealt, is to kill off the big grandiose dreams and instead focus on the little things, the little incremental and realistic ambitions. Ok, I can’t have biological kids of the exact gender or description I was hoping. What about adopting? Or being around kids in other ways, helping kids in need etc. Ok, I might not be the CEO of a multinational corporation. What about my current job, is it the best I can hope for? The answer to this is almost always no, even if the progress may only be incremental. Of course quitting one’s job, pursuing a different career or asking for a promotion are all hard, exponentially so the older you get, but not impossible. Ok, I might never look like Brad Pit, does that mean I would not look and feel a lot better if I ate a healthier diet? And so on. I think people should kill their dreams and instead ask, what action or habit, that I could realistically do, right now, would make my life exponentially better. And then pursue that.

  • @a.sobriquet6220

    @a.sobriquet6220

    7 ай бұрын

    Judith Viorst called the dying of dreams “necessary losses” which I always appreciated because it reframes the grief as a necessary step to greater wisdom, humility (which is a GOOD thing…”right-sizing” oneself) and compassion.

  • @TAGtalkinaboutGod

    @TAGtalkinaboutGod

    7 ай бұрын

    It's because you believe you know what's best for you, rather than leaving it to Infinite, Incorporeal, Omnipresent Consciousness, or God if you will...!

  • @miriam2909

    @miriam2909

    7 ай бұрын

    The dying of dreams and the unlearning of crap. But every day is still beautiful…

  • @mikem9892

    @mikem9892

    6 ай бұрын

    Two gems of wisdom handed down to me by my grandfather... happiness is not having what you want but wanting what you have. And life is not what you make it but how you take it.

  • @janettehale3109
    @janettehale31097 ай бұрын

    As a baby boomer and not in the best of health what I feel like I am grieving is the loss of a phrase - ‘and the best is yet to be’. That has kept me going so many times during my life but I know that now the best has already been. It cuts me to my core.

  • @Patti-xl1ej

    @Patti-xl1ej

    7 ай бұрын

    So true, my goodness how I can relate ☜⁠ ⁠(⁠↼⁠_⁠↼⁠)

  • @loftonrudolph7586

    @loftonrudolph7586

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm going through this right now. I've never felt so helpless.

  • @Portia620

    @Portia620

    7 ай бұрын

    😢🙏

  • @lindaferguson630

    @lindaferguson630

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel exactly the same way. We can no longer say to ourselves things will get better or something better will come along. It is so confronting.Up till now that's how we've lived our life.

  • @sharong8841

    @sharong8841

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel exactly the same. 68 years old don’t care if I live or die any more. A terrible way to feel about your last years.

  • @yolandabraithwaite7730
    @yolandabraithwaite77302 ай бұрын

    What hurts is never being able to even try or finish a dream. I get gas-lighted about how selfish it is to have my hobbies. Yet they are the only thing that keeps me sane. I am home a lot because I care for my 16 year autistic son.

  • @helensavvides6582

    @helensavvides6582

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh my gosh. Keep on hobbying. x

  • @user-wi9hv2pb2q

    @user-wi9hv2pb2q

    2 ай бұрын

    people make fun of other people's happiness out of jealousy.

  • @CF-mi7xd

    @CF-mi7xd

    2 ай бұрын

    I also stay home with my 16 year old nonverbal autistic son. It can be very isolating.

  • @lindasharp8523

    @lindasharp8523

    Ай бұрын

    Hobbies keep me sane. I knit, crochet, paint, make stuff for my dollhouse, redo old furniture, sew, listen to 60/70/80's music. Just ordered a reborn doll I will be knitting and sewing for. Also just ordered a French knitting doll and I'm going to make a rug. Keep doing hobbies luv and don't listen to those people who don't have your best interests at heart. Hugs x

  • @jennifernace1666

    @jennifernace1666

    Ай бұрын

    People do not understand the isolation and emotional load of being a caregiver to a child who is not/will not be independent. Even those closest who “should” know may not if they chose not to carry that responsibility, or have something outside of that part of their life to be focused on sometimes. Here the don’t compare thing can really change things for us (I put my life in hold to care for my terminally I’ll son when he was 1, life expectancy of 10, he is now 19) don’t let people who aren’t you make you feel guilty by what they say. A physicist would not change their method based off of the comments of a car dealer… this is the same way we should approach that input in our lives. “That’s okay you think that, but I am the specialist in the field of my life and I will do what I know works for my child and I, thanks anyway.”

  • @barbaraschain9260
    @barbaraschain92602 ай бұрын

    I have accepted the fact that i am 66 with no partner, children, or grand-children. What friends and family don't understand is that a lot of your life over the years is lived through other people's lives. I am very happy for everyone's joys, but there are the down times when you realise what you don't have and it is highlighted a lot. This is reality.

  • @susanlore345

    @susanlore345

    Ай бұрын

    I feel this. So true

  • @1legend517

    @1legend517

    4 күн бұрын

    I am absolutely living the same way. And part of me realises that there are a lot of people that don't even deserve that level of happiness.

  • @1legend517

    @1legend517

    4 күн бұрын

    I can't do it. Everyday I'm struggling with this. No support, nothing. I've watched on as all my friends, cousins etc got married, had families of their own and disappeared from my life. Ive nearly always been single, always left wondering what's wrong with me and why I could never have that, why I could never find the right person. I've never been more alone and depressed than I am now. Difficult to find a reason to get up or function everyday. It gets worse every year, I no longer want to care about or celebrate birthdays the older that i get and i wish people would leave me alone. I am sick of living for other people's happiness and their families, their achievements, and their social lives when I have none of my own. I am so sick of the loneliness and the feelings of failure. I'm sick of being told that I should step parent or adopt and accept someone else's kids as my own. I've always wanted my own family. I've been rejected for the better half of my life and have never even once celebrated a valentine's day. Im so lonely I'm on medication for depression. Doctors, GPs, therapists, they dont care about me. I just want to go to sleep and not wake up.

  • @barbaraschain9260

    @barbaraschain9260

    4 күн бұрын

    @@1legend517 I feel for you dear soul. I am praying life may turn around for you one day🙏 Sending lots of love to you

  • @buffyramm294
    @buffyramm2947 ай бұрын

    You are the only person to ever discuss this ambiguous grief issue. As a mom of a kid with disabilities I have been told so many times to “look on the bright side” or ‘it could be worse’. I have been excluded from social groups at school because other moms don’t know what to do with us. It is a long hard road. Thank you for talking about it.

  • @mikjb

    @mikjb

    6 ай бұрын

    "Look on the bright side" or "It could be worse." are two of the cruelest well meaning things anyone can ever say to a person in pain.

  • @teriliebmann3491

    @teriliebmann3491

    6 ай бұрын

    🙏blessings on your journey

  • @Opal5674

    @Opal5674

    6 ай бұрын

    I feel this. My son is 14 and will probably never have a relationship because people see him as having the mind of a much younger child. He may never drive or have a job. I feel he's going to be left out and lonely all his life. He's my only child. I have not much living family and I feel I won't even be able to die in peace because I'll probably never have the relief a parent must feel when they know their child could take care of themselves. There are kids worse off than my son yes but I don't see why I'm supposed to not grieve what he won't have

  • @mikjb

    @mikjb

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Opal5674 you have every right to feel this way, the hard part is not to let yourself drown in it. Let it paralyze you. Different reasons but i struggle with this too. I say it out of empathy. Consider yourself hugged.

  • @laurac.9322

    @laurac.9322

    6 ай бұрын

    YeAh I we have the same issue. We are social outcasts socially isolated it feels awful and then picked on bullied too.

  • @teresahild
    @teresahild6 ай бұрын

    As a therapist myself, I want you to know, your ability to communicate is exemplary! You have a gift!

  • @tobe-you-tube6612

    @tobe-you-tube6612

    Ай бұрын

    Yes amazing communication skills 🙂

  • @jaelancaster5506

    @jaelancaster5506

    23 күн бұрын

    Yes! So truthful…no stinkin platitudes or ….” Have you tried such and such” Just pure accepting the truths and unspeakable of anxiety and depression that we don’t even whisper So so helpful….love the absence of practiced unreal resonance…. the absence of that ‘clinical’ mask is actually what makes him so relatable as well as informative

  • @DHS9
    @DHS94 ай бұрын

    Dr. Scott... I don't even know how to thank you for what you do. Today, is my 70th birthday and I'm grieving not having been the world famous author I dreamed of being. I wrote two books that went nowhere and now it's time to let go and to have that ceremony. I also suffer from severe freeze issues; I can't even function when I'm overwhelmed. I truly believe that you were sent to help people like me. I found you by accident, in a very low moment and I cannot express my gratitude for this gift. Please know the good you are doing for those like me; you are needed and appreciated. You tell it like it is and help us feel much better about so many things in us. Again thank you and many blessings.

  • @lillianbarker4292

    @lillianbarker4292

    2 ай бұрын

    As a fellow writer, I’m envious that you wrote a book!

  • @DHS9

    @DHS9

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh Miss Lillian... Thank you. They are labours of love and pain, and keep us somewhat sane. Do keep writing what your heart tells you to. Even if it's only for you. God bless... Dee

  • @paulyortiz2558

    @paulyortiz2558

    Ай бұрын

    I also found this article very moving. And I am just reading your story. I found DR Scott Eilers you tube page yesterday. My husband and I have a similar story. Ours was in the music business. We are producers and musicians and songwriters. I have dedicated my life to my piano and writing and singing. There were three albums released through CBS and WEA. We were totally dedicated and honestly at the time thought we were on the road to true success. We worked and pushed so hard but after dedicating over 40 to 50 years each we had to stop and take measure. I felt it start to destroy my soul. I went through a bad patch sometime ago along with my husband. I felt the dream slipping away, and had to come to terms things were not going to happen the way I planned. I hope you are a little uplifted. You are not alone. And you know it’s nothing to do with your talent. There really isn’t any true justice and it does come down to luck and timing. Being in the place at the right time and knowing the right people has a lot to do with things. So please take heart, and write anyway. I am about to go on my piano and just write. No one can take that away. It’s in your soul. Xxx

  • @CarolDeeDot

    @CarolDeeDot

    Ай бұрын

    I can relate. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @BeRightBack131

    @BeRightBack131

    10 күн бұрын

    Keep writing! JRR Tolkien was rejected again and again and again. He quite possibly was the greatest author I've ever read. Major publishers turned him down on the Hobbit and LOTR trilogies numerous times. And now look... he's probably the most famous, well known and well loved author of all time. I also love to write, and I've even written several entire books. When I was 17, my dad made me throw all of my books, poems and other writing in the fire. I watched them burn and my hope along with it. Years later, I decided to take up writing again. Again, I wrote a few more books. Then my husband (now ex) dragged them all out (I had a plastic, waterproof tub that I kept my books and rough drafts in to protect them).. Anyway, he was mad so he took all of my writing, artwork, etc outside, took the lid off the tub and filled it with water. I didn't know he had done this until it was too late. Now, at 62, I've started over again. I have one book complete, several others in progress/rough draft form. I'm still working on them while trying to format one book for Amazon publishing. I will never give up. And don't you either!

  • @AlwaysLearning1470
    @AlwaysLearning14702 ай бұрын

    Dr. Eilers. I can’t express how profoundly this video hit me. I just turned 64, but I’ve been mourning the loss of the life that I imagined as a youth for more years than I can count. In many ways, this is the core issue that I’ve tried to describe to numerous therapists and even close family members for years, but I’ve always felt a little ridiculous trying to explain it. In my case at least, this sadness has been accompanied by an equally painful sense of shame in often being vaguely sad for no apparent reason, and not “appreciating what I have”. This video gave me words for what I am, and have been, feeling. And more than that, your humanity in sharing that you too have experienced this grief makes me feel less alone in the experience. I feel very hopeful that now a real healing process can finally begin. Thank you.

  • @rw4754

    @rw4754

    Ай бұрын

    Me too. I am also 64. I am in the throws of grieving a lost love of 43 years ago & I am absolutely gutted. I am sobbing & my heart feels like someone is wringing it out. Wave hit me a month ago out of the blue.😢😭

  • @randydiluzio8269
    @randydiluzio82697 ай бұрын

    Hello Dr. Scott, to be honest, I was born disabled and I have spent most of my life watching my dreams get crushed. My soul has been haunted by many of the ghost you spoke of here. But, I was amazed how just being able to give a name to the pain I felt, made me feel so much peace. Thank you so very much for this video man!! 😊😊😊

  • @mariamalicek7794

    @mariamalicek7794

    7 ай бұрын

    Praying for you

  • @emilala9049

    @emilala9049

    6 ай бұрын

    I became disabled in my 20's I've spent about half my life trying to accept that I won't ever have any of the things I thought I would have. Now I'm just in pain all the time and I'd settle for having enough pain meds to not always be in pain.

  • @jenniferg6818

    @jenniferg6818

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm so sorry. Sending you blessings.

  • @WillMoon
    @WillMoon7 ай бұрын

    I didn't know there was a name for this. I always called it "existential sadness", the idea that you're sad for the state of your very being and that you know things cannot be the way you want them to be. The worst is when you try to realize your dreams, fail at doing it, then later you realize that the life you wanted to achieve cannot possibly be, and then you see others achieving that life you failed at. That's the darkest reality one can live.

  • @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    2 ай бұрын

    You didn't fail. Your dreams were stolen from you. Those 'others' achievers had help and used people along the way. You just never saw it. Neither did I. I still pay for my naivety every.... single.....day

  • @thijsjong

    @thijsjong

    Ай бұрын

    Most of the time it is out of your control or it is something you could not have known. And when you knew it was too late. Or if you knew you would have quit sooner. If it was something big as your career, significant otger or child its ezpecially dire. Only thing you can do is move on.

  • @julietellsthetruth4811
    @julietellsthetruth48112 ай бұрын

    I lived through an abusive family and an abusive marriage. I was unable to have children. I did not have the life I thought I would, and I let my health fail because I had no reason not to. But a whole other world of opportunities has opened up to me, and I'm running like crazy to fix what is broken so I can take on these new dreams. In spite of everything, I have been so blessed and my life is amazing. Do I feel like I'm running out of time? Oh, on the daily! But it's pushing me to make the best use of the years I have left. I'm about to turn 60, and I'm about to rock this world!

  • @nirrti7
    @nirrti75 ай бұрын

    Being on the autism spectrum, this hit hard. I didn't know why my brain was different at the time and I thought someday, I would become this "normal" person and I would get all the love, jobs, and family I was missing. When I realized I would always be "me", this was all I get, it was so freeing yet so devastating at the same time.

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    5 ай бұрын

    Makes sense. Many other people on the ASD spectrum have commented on this video specifically with similar sentiments.

  • @ianaliciaperry5243

    @ianaliciaperry5243

    5 ай бұрын

    I've been going through this as well. It's very painful.

  • @rocketpsyence

    @rocketpsyence

    4 ай бұрын

    oh god this

  • @hoffmanshaven

    @hoffmanshaven

    3 ай бұрын

    Yup I'm 51 just about to be 52. Autistic and life sucks. My marriage of 30 years was all I had and we're not really getting along truth be told. I have few friends and no family to speak of and this world is slowly going to shit. YAAAAAYYYYY

  • @MrRocksW

    @MrRocksW

    3 ай бұрын

    31M and I feel the same.❤

  • @NS-xt5wv
    @NS-xt5wv7 ай бұрын

    That’s what I told my therapist at the peak of my depression “I’ve always had these big dreams and images of how my life will be like that are inspiring and stimulating, but failure after failure, I have learned how not to dream anymore and the abyss came”. Doomed if you dream and your dreams don’t become a reality and doomed if you don’t dream because it robs you of any motivation.

  • @lyncisr5059

    @lyncisr5059

    7 ай бұрын

    I relate to you. My dreams also shattered, I shut down, was scared to even do stuff somehow connected to this dream (being creative in general, writing, painting) because I didn't want to have hope again that I can do something with it. Because the pain was too real. And on top of this I felt very guilty that I'm so upset by this. For now I'm slowly trying again, moving to new city with my friends, starting new projects. I'm scared as fuck, but without my dreams my life is senseless to me. I'm living only for other people without it and it scares me - my existence is pointless without them. If they leave me I'm lost

  • @Beading_Kate

    @Beading_Kate

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you, good person, you gave the name for a state of soul I am in right now. The abyss. Too scared to dream, too scared to live, too scared to leave. Sometimes it feels better and almost manageable, sometimes not. Sometimes it feels like I am just a random visitor in my own body, a passenger who patiently waits for her flight doing nothing. I try to do what made me happy in the past, but it doesn’t anymore. I try to find a way to myself, but my scared little self is not where I left it, and I don’t have energy nor inspiration to make new ways.

  • @micsnz

    @micsnz

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel this exact same way.

  • @ruiierudice

    @ruiierudice

    7 ай бұрын

    I speak from my heart as I write this. The way you worded your experience was piercing. I don't think I've seen anyone describe the sensation with such vivid accuracy. I read your comment and just found myself trapped within my own thoughts for a good 5 minutes. I'm at a stage in my life where I'm beginning to see the abyss. Refusing to succumb to it is getting more and more exhausting by the day. I wish to fight it, I truly do - but the motivation to do so is slowly being replaced by a hollow of shallow acceptance. Life is suffocating, and oftentimes feels like an indestructible invisible cage. I feel like anyone who says otherwise is either extremely fortunate, or has already gladly crushed their dreams under their own feet. I truly wish life could release its stranglehold on all those grieving out there, even if just by a little. So few people acknowledge this form of grief and it's so difficult to find a single respite from it, that it's just unhealthily buried where no one can find it.

  • @111...

    @111...

    7 ай бұрын

    💙😭

  • @catherinesmith7068
    @catherinesmith70687 ай бұрын

    I'm 60, thought I'd be married, have kids/grandkids, friends, nice house, could go on. Am finally accepting my life is not what I wanted and having to accept my life is what it is. Yes it hurts but less than before and gets less over time. Helps reading the comments showing I'm not alone with these feelings. I love the days when I am happy, I make the most of those days.

  • @jeannespratt1235

    @jeannespratt1235

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your story. I feel less lonely. I thought my life would be different, but at 62 I am learning to accept the way things are and thankful for the blessings in my life❤️

  • @karenc1733

    @karenc1733

    3 ай бұрын

    Beautifully said

  • @imustaway

    @imustaway

    3 ай бұрын

    same here, you are not alone

  • @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    2 ай бұрын

    You were robbed of your dreams along the way. You were so busy trying to achieve them you didn't notice those around you doing it.

  • @clsatc

    @clsatc

    Ай бұрын

    Wow cannot believe how many of us feel this way about our lives. We certainly are not alone. Wish we could start a support/discussion group.

  • @frances3254
    @frances32546 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much. I'm 87 and able to see more clearly the 'DREAM' that has impacted my life. My best to you and all who have commented.

  • @dmorse3866
    @dmorse38665 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Dr Scott. Lockdown in 2020 sent all my dreams/plans into oblivion. And was replaced by survival while homeless. Still is. But I have learned to live with the grief of what's gone.

  • @mrlevi2k
    @mrlevi2k6 ай бұрын

    So many dead dreams and faded expectations...hope has become a four letter word.

  • @tlmarlin1761

    @tlmarlin1761

    2 ай бұрын

    I feel that too !

  • @Desiree-Laine

    @Desiree-Laine

    2 ай бұрын

    YES.

  • @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    2 ай бұрын

    Graveyard of dreams

  • @earll_hues8046

    @earll_hues8046

    2 ай бұрын

    This is deep.

  • @TennesseeJed

    @TennesseeJed

    Ай бұрын

    The story of Pandora addresses this in it's deeper message. Hope prolongs suffering, so leave it mostly in the jar.

  • @MAGH1O1
    @MAGH1O17 ай бұрын

    The combination of abject poverty, desease/physical handicap, old age, and injustice is a very challenging situation to be in.

  • @thomasneal7126
    @thomasneal71265 ай бұрын

    I am 62 and my physical body is finally showing signs of breaking down. My ambiguous grief comes from the death of my physical strength and vigor of my younger years. I am ok with aging and that I may not have done some things in my life that I thought I might do, but for some reason my physical body breaking down has just devastated me. I have always been able to handle setbacks in my life and keep plowing ahead, but it is taking everything I have to power through this grief I am feeling right now.

  • @leslie5882

    @leslie5882

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm going through that right now too.

  • @Kingatje
    @Kingatje2 ай бұрын

    I think people who have moved countries to pursue life goals, while still having their family (parents, grandparents,...) in the home country, experience this grief too. You may have built yourself a better life than you could have at home, and you may have settled down to a satisfactory degree, but you will not have your cousins or mom over for dinner. They won't be there to hold your baby. To see your new place. This video helped me realise that isn't something that directly is an alterego of yourself that you're mourning per se, but the nature of, or lack of, some of your relationships. And that is worth a moment's considerarion too.

  • @dianathomas1025
    @dianathomas10257 ай бұрын

    I lost my only sibling, my brother to suicide in 2011. And then my best friend, my dad to cancer in 2014. I just lost my youngest son in 8/2023 who turned 23, just a few weeks before he passed. I didn’t grieve correctly with my dad. I was angry & in denial for over two years. Unhealthy! Losing my son is a pain like NO other. No parent should bury a child. I am letting myself grieve this time & it’s so very hard!!!! I have never cried so much in my life. I’m exhausted. I can’t think. I’m in a constant fog. I have ADHD & a TBI. Add grief to that & I am a mess. Losing my son is the hardest loss! Parents don’t prepare for it. It’s unthinkable. Unimaginable. My dream was having children & watching my children grow. I didn’t want a career. I wanted to be a mom! I don’t get to have that now. I will never see him get married. I won’t hold his babies in my arms. I won’t get to watch him grow old. I will never hear him call me mother, again. My dreams are crushed. My soul is shattered. When his heart stopped beating, I lost a part of my soul forever! The only thing that brings me hope is knowing that he’s in heaven. He is good. I am not okay. But maybe I will be one day. Life will never be the same. How do you overcome the loss of a sweet child? Each day is one day closer to holding him in my arms once again. But for now, I try to live my life here on earth with my children & my grandchild until He calls me home. I will see him again. And then I will be whole again. 💔😢💛🕊️

  • @kcampos5619

    @kcampos5619

    7 ай бұрын

    Diana, I’m so sorry for your loss. I commend you for coming here and for posting. Take the best care of yourself that you possibly can. Know that this stranger online is sending you all my best. I don’t have to know you to care. ❤

  • @therealdeal3672

    @therealdeal3672

    7 ай бұрын

    Wishing you the strength to keep going. Sending love for your heart to keep beating. Grieving with you for your heartbreaking loss! 😭 💔

  • @nicolegregory4429

    @nicolegregory4429

    7 ай бұрын

    I’m so sorry for your loss. I became a ghost in my own life because of death and suicide. Sending you love and prayers for peace for your heart as you’re going through this. 💜🙏🏻💜 ~N

  • @dellawolfdove8927

    @dellawolfdove8927

    7 ай бұрын

    😭💔😭💔😭💔😭💔🙏🕊️

  • @skippy7208

    @skippy7208

    7 ай бұрын

    Such unimaginable pain 😭 my heart goes out to you 💔 sincere condolences for your loss 🙏

  • @karenholmes6565
    @karenholmes65656 ай бұрын

    The best way to grieve the death of a dream is to find a new one. I am 55 and I have a lifetime of unrealized dreams. Our inner critic grinds us into dust, telling us how we are to blame for all of our failed plans. I can only tell you how I made peace with mine, finding out I have been swimming upstream my entire life has helped me forgive myself for failing. I have autism. I didn't realize this until March of 2023. That explained how I can be so gifted in many ways, and yet unable to do something simple like driving a car. I forgive myself. I am in awe that I managed to get anywhere with how harsh this world is. Everyone has a different set of circumstances, barriers to our success. Forgive yourself. And then dream a new dream. Without dreams we die.

  • @play-fool

    @play-fool

    2 ай бұрын

    this hit me like a truck because as I was reading, I was thinking about how I discovered late last year that I am undiagnosed autistic... I still have to get my official diagnosis, but the consensus of everybody who knows me including my psychologist and doctor is that this is pretty reasonable. thinking how you were describing my exact situation, and then you said that you figured out you were autistic too... this is exactly how it is, and I have experienced a wall when trying to discuss it with others or even with a therapist. I don't know about you but this definitely happened to me because of autistic burnout... from which I'm still yet to recover but it's been almost a decade of this. I am very tired, but I am trying to convince myself I can still have a dream. thank you *so much* for sharing.

  • @catpawrosales4265

    @catpawrosales4265

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm so new to this, I'm 56 and I've only just worked this out too. But where do I go from here? I can forgive myself for thinking it was my fault when I was forever swimming upstream, but it still won't magically unlock or bring me what I fought so hard for for decades. I'm still sitting here, feeling my life has been wasted, or at least I have nothing to show for how hard I've worked and tried and failed at. I have nothing else left I want, I've tried it all and nothing came of it. I'm sorry, I'm rambling. Thank you for reading, whoever you are. It means more than you know.

  • @karenholmes6565

    @karenholmes6565

    2 ай бұрын

    @@catpawrosales4265 I read and I see you. I am seeking diagnosis. I did an initial assessment with a social worker. She pointed out that much of what I said was in the past tense, she pointed out that I still had plenty of time ahead of me to find something new to work towards. I think I might start trying to become an advocate for autistic women. Most autistic people have barriers with communication. I could be a voice. You can be one too. We have so many little sisters that have few models to look towards. We can pave a way

  • @Desiree-Laine

    @Desiree-Laine

    2 ай бұрын

    TY so much for sharing this. I hope you find true happiness.❤

  • @elenamilitopingitore5044

    @elenamilitopingitore5044

    2 ай бұрын

    There is a free autism quiz/test online.

  • @amiraezz204
    @amiraezz2042 ай бұрын

    I let myself cry while watching this video. I've always been unable to accept that I should grieve my unattained dreams. I felt your empathy as if you were talking to me. I will follow your advice. I will not compare my life to others, and I will not expect them to see my loss. You already saw it. This is the first time I see you and you have helped me a lot. There is another problem that comes out frequently, it's when people remind you with your (inadequacy) because you haven't gone through regular life events. This hurts a lot because not only that they don't see how hurting this is, they're forcing the feeling of shame.

  • @laurenlauren4239

    @laurenlauren4239

    Ай бұрын

    I recognise this, it's a huge loss when you haven't been through those life events that so many people take for granted, and the feeling of shame just makes it so much worse. Shame can be crippling and make it even harder to find a way forward. It seems like gentle self compassion and acknowledgement of the reality while gently supporting and caring for yourself are the way forward. And taking action on the things that matter to you, in the areas where this is still possible. I also use helplines a lot, to give myself the space to be heard by someone, without the comparisons that can arise with friends. Really wishing you well. ❤️

  • @adoptsalot
    @adoptsalotАй бұрын

    Ambiguous grief, dreams dying, fantasy self never happening... all heartbreaking.

  • @Erin-uz2gf
    @Erin-uz2gf7 ай бұрын

    This is the grief that you feel deeply, but no one else knows about it, because you feel like they'll think you're crazy for being so sensitive about everything. I have felt this grief for so many things over the years. Thank you Dr. Eilers

  • @DrTiwade

    @DrTiwade

    7 ай бұрын

    True.

  • @LoveAndSnapple

    @LoveAndSnapple

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes. We all have our little dreams that we like to come true outside the realm of what most people desire. It’s different for all of us, but the desire is there nonetheless.

  • @journeytoself8067

    @journeytoself8067

    7 ай бұрын

    I know exactly what you mean!

  • @Natashahoneypot

    @Natashahoneypot

    6 ай бұрын

    We've all felt it

  • @Grumpyrome
    @Grumpyrome7 ай бұрын

    You are better than my therapist . Ur correct never told. Ambiguous Grief?? My only child was murdered at 17, i was 37. He had just graduated, I had a great job, needless to say I lost it. Excepting that ALL my dreams were gone is (still) heart wrenching.... You do explain the greif process so well. Its 20ys & its like yesterday & still cry, my heart still hurts. And for every feel good day, time, laugh i have I know he is with me. He lives in my ❤.

  • @SN-sz7kw

    @SN-sz7kw

    4 ай бұрын

    💔💔💔

  • @play-fool

    @play-fool

    2 ай бұрын

    🕊️

  • @IMeMineWho

    @IMeMineWho

    2 ай бұрын

    I feel that way about my folks..like the movie has gone from color to black and white. I long to be the person I was a few years ago. I have a sweet bunny who gives me laughs and love, but I am not the person I was before.

  • @andyokus5735

    @andyokus5735

    2 ай бұрын

    I feel you man. Lost my nephew to a heroin overdose. Long story but when I realized my brothers taught him drugs were cool and ok it's just another scar. Your grief will eventually fade, never leave but just keep sending him your love. You didn't kill him Dad some sick scum did. I'm sending a prayer for you right now.

  • @judigemini178

    @judigemini178

    2 ай бұрын

    I can't even tell you how sorry I am...the fact that you can even get up in the morning is evidence that you are a warrior. Stay strong 🤍

  • @jbuckley2515
    @jbuckley25155 ай бұрын

    I’ve spent the last six years in therapy and have tried to express this and had no idea how to say it. You nailed it. I’m about to turn 60 and the last year I’ve struggled with continuing in my healing because I’ve realized that I’m too late for any dream I’ve ever had. I spent my life trying to understand why I couldn’t obtain my dream of a job, marriage and family. Now I understand but it’s too late. No more time on the clock. There won’t be a successful job. There won’t be a happy family to spent the holidays with. Just no time left. My therapist thinks I should just be happy that I’m better emotionally and mentally. And I am happy about that. I just keep feeling intense sadness that I don’t have enough time left to do much with this new found health. I’ve secretly wondered if this is a form of grief and now I know. Thank you for this video so very much.

  • @hermes63

    @hermes63

    3 ай бұрын

    I am exactly at the same place

  • @kevinsawyer6968

    @kevinsawyer6968

    2 ай бұрын

    No time? I don't get that. You're 60, not 96.

  • @jbuckley2515

    @jbuckley2515

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kevinsawyer6968 I sure hope you aren’t a parent. Or therapist. Or a friend to anyone.

  • @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kevinsawyer6968 Some people wont get to 96. Some wont get to 60. I'll be lucky if I do. When the fuel tank is empty its empty. no amount of wishing or well worn out cliches can refill it Keep driving on fumes, wonderboy

  • @gaylepeeples9749
    @gaylepeeples97492 ай бұрын

    I tried to express this to a highly educated therapist who just stared at me, like what are you talking about? I was stopped several times from buying my dream retirement home because of intense anxiety attacks that I could not get past. I described it to her that I felt ' i have broken my own heart.' It still makes me emotional and feeling like a failure..'

  • @depressedrabbit3381
    @depressedrabbit33817 ай бұрын

    Last two years, I've been grieving the dreams I am never going to have. I always thought my life would be different at this point, I thought I'd have everything everyone gets in their late 40s, but I haven't even started on a path I wanted to....I have been so god damn depressed over this and you're literally the first person that EVER actually identified this type of grief.

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    7 ай бұрын

    I’m sorry it’s taken this long ❤️ it’s just as real as anyone else’s grief

  • @natashatallent6566

    @natashatallent6566

    7 ай бұрын

    I can totally relate.

  • @catfancier270

    @catfancier270

    7 ай бұрын

    I can totally relate-also in my forties and my life has gone nowhere due to a convergence of various factors.

  • @hankaul6256

    @hankaul6256

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks so very much for trying to help us losers out

  • @hankaul6256

    @hankaul6256

    7 ай бұрын

  • @jamesthurber4730
    @jamesthurber47307 ай бұрын

    I have suffered from this for over 20 years, thinking I was completely alone in my inability to deal with the loss of all my hopes and dreams when I was in my 40's. I'm now in my 60's, and I do function, but I have never recovered from the loss. My personal grief is always just below the surface, and I need to be extremely careful in public in case something triggers it and I break down publicly. Thank you for letting me know I am not alone in this. I don't expect to recover from it, but at least I have a better understanding of my mental processes.

  • @susanann8741

    @susanann8741

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you for putting my thoughts and experiences into words. And yes ‘my grief is always there just below the surface’. All the best to you. Perhaps a new dream will keep us going.💕

  • @DrTiwade

    @DrTiwade

    7 ай бұрын

    True

  • @lalalalaland84

    @lalalalaland84

    6 ай бұрын

    I also break down publicly and am easily triggered.

  • @juliebraden4865

    @juliebraden4865

    6 ай бұрын

    U just spoke to me. U r not alone with these feelings. ❤

  • @OrangeMicMusic

    @OrangeMicMusic

    6 ай бұрын

    Same situation here. For me, trying to get help (or understand what to do) from friends / family about my loss of hopes and dreams was always put me even in lower mental state. People who have never experienced this type of loss will tell you that is fake. They think that only "real" loss is real.

  • @suecondon1685
    @suecondon16853 ай бұрын

    Oh god I really feel this. I'm 65, I wasted so much of my life and now I'm so aware of time running out, and all the things I'm never going to have or do. It is definitely a form of grief 😢

  • @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    @Thenogomogo-zo3un

    2 ай бұрын

    I feel you ❤

  • @JayNDez22
    @JayNDez22Ай бұрын

    Mar 26, 2024 i found this and didn't even know how much i needed this... my heart hurts so friggin bad.... i feel like I've been grieving my whole life... i want out of it, but i can't seem to figure my way out... it hurts so bad i can't even breathe..... God, please help me.....

  • @Brettsharplpn

    @Brettsharplpn

    Ай бұрын

    Take a deep breath, you can get your bearings and stand. You will overcome, believe you can. Hugs.

  • @Undercoverbooks
    @Undercoverbooks6 ай бұрын

    I think this topic is especially poignant right now as so many of us are realizing our lives in this world/society aren't going to be what we anticipated they'd be. I see my adult children and grandchildren struggling to meet basic needs and facing uncertain futures filled with political conflict and economic hardship, and I feel helpless to shield them from the disappointments they're going to face. I grieve for the plans and futures they aren't going to be able to have. I grieve that they won't experience this beautiful planet in the way I did growing up. They will have to find their own beauty and way forward.

  • @roxannerodriguez7075

    @roxannerodriguez7075

    6 ай бұрын

    These same thoughts and emotions cause me to almost wish I could go back in time, and never have my kids. What world did I bring them into? Life is hard for me. Every. Single. Day. They see this. They're likely to repeat it. This is not how I believed life would be! Not at all. And I only see it getting worse and worse. My kids are too old to run away into the woods and start my own little world out there. Now they're world is even tougher. And they're likely to have kids! I dunno. It's just so hard and tiring. It's hard to look into the future and see anything happy happening. 😞

  • @PaperParade

    @PaperParade

    6 ай бұрын

    I think my mother is beginning to feel the same way. I’m 27 almost 28 and still struggling to just meet my own basic needs-and I have a degree and full-time job. My brother is 23 and has never left the home, never had a job. The world we are facing is terrifying and I feel like everything I ever dreamed of doing growing up has been ripped away. I have very little hope for my future, and I know it’s basically an entire generation that feels this way.

  • @Undercoverbooks

    @Undercoverbooks

    6 ай бұрын

    Hang in there! Watch for the little joys every day, the sunrises, the small things. Those can get you through.@@roxannerodriguez7075

  • @Undercoverbooks

    @Undercoverbooks

    6 ай бұрын

    My heart goes out to you! Hang in there. You can still have dreams, they just might need to change and grow into something else. But there is still beauty in the small things of everyday life.@@PaperParade

  • @Opal5674

    @Opal5674

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@PaperParadeIs your 23 year old brother able bodied and all? Why has he never worked?

  • @Yellow-Rose
    @Yellow-Rose7 ай бұрын

    I don't have any of the things I wanted either, but I forgive myself. I used to think I was an incompetent loser. It wasn't until much later in life when I realized I suffered from depression, anxiety and ptsd which took away a lot of opportunities. I'm in my 40s and I still believe I have a chance to be happy. I've managed to get a good grip on my mental issues. I'm accomplishing things now I thought I could never do. Your dreams don't have to die, they can be redesigned and recalibrated to fit your current life.

  • @susanmeadows627
    @susanmeadows627Ай бұрын

    I'm 65 and I can't settle for that. I'm blessed, appreciative, thankful and grateful. Life can always be worse. It can also be better. I have a dream and my bad decisions are keeping me from fulfilling that dream. I want to fix it before I die. Even if I fail I want to try. I don't like settling. My dream is moving to another state. I don't think that's unreasonable or unrealistic.

  • @6catalina0
    @6catalina05 ай бұрын

    With me, it is the second grief, the grief over a romantic relationship that could have happened.

  • @nikosalexopoulos6542

    @nikosalexopoulos6542

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@diamondstars10 Me too.. take care

  • @ranandiebraut7425

    @ranandiebraut7425

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@diamondstars10 this makes me so angry because I had this too and he ran away. The told me when he was drunken. I hate him so much for this. Now he is taking drugs and I hate him ever more. He was always hurting me intentionally. He f up our whole life. He completely destroyed a whole generation. He changed the future for the worst. Just because he was a coward.

  • @stephenvanwoert2447
    @stephenvanwoert24477 ай бұрын

    I know the feeling, at 75. Time ran out on achieving my plans and dreams and just normal ordinary mundane expectations. Death will come as a liberation, but until then, my heart insists on beating.

  • @magnetdesignandadver

    @magnetdesignandadver

    6 ай бұрын

    As long as we have something left to fulfil in this world, we will be here. Even if it's just to offer a genuine smile or a sympathetic ear to someone who has not found it anywhere else

  • @barbaraseidel4342

    @barbaraseidel4342

    3 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @carolinegraystone9308

    @carolinegraystone9308

    3 ай бұрын

    and I wish mine would stop

  • @PoFolks_Capital

    @PoFolks_Capital

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@carolinegraystone9308 i know where you're coming from. I dont have the answer but i know that is not a option so we have to keep going. Im tormented by my thoughts of the future and the only thing that helps to keep moving. Staying busy doing anything at all bc when i give myself to much time to think i make it worse. I try to adjust my expectations and work towards a new goal and maybe in the course of doing that things might work out. The biggest help has been taking time to do stuff i enjoy and completely forgetting about the world. I look forward to those times and that gives me something to live for.

  • @stephenvanwoert2447

    @stephenvanwoert2447

    2 ай бұрын

    @@PoFolks_Capital Do stuff you must do, then do stuff you enjoy. Or maybe the other way around. Yes, the other way around.

  • @wiandewaal
    @wiandewaal7 ай бұрын

    I lost friends over this kind of grief. They judged me as not tough enough... not driven enough. Then there are also those who project onto me that I'm well and fine when I'm not, and I don't pretend myself to be okay when not. Thanks for putting it into perspective 💛

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    7 ай бұрын

    It hurts when those closest to you, who should be able to understand, seem unable to or simply refuse to try ❤️

  • @davidadams2395

    @davidadams2395

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry you lost people because they lacked the insight to understand your feelings. What's important is that you were able to articulate your grief. It's how you will learn to accept the loss and move on.

  • @LillianCrawfishDE
    @LillianCrawfishDEАй бұрын

    This discussion addresses just what I went through several years ago. I owned a gardening business for about 12 years. I absolutely loved the gardening aspect, lucked out by having mostly great employees and clients, but I was terrible at being an effective businessperson. As a result, we lost $180k and filed for bankrupcy. I felt like a total failure. When I started my business, it was my second career. I thought that I had finally found my calling. I was in the best mood when I had my hands in the dirt. When it failed, I was convinced that the best part of my life was over. I grieved not just the loss of the business but also my reason for living. So what's the point of going forward? I didn't want to die. I just didn't care about living. It only got better when I opened myself up to the idea that maybe it was the creative part of designing and installing beautiful gardens (and helping to share my appreciation of Mother Nature with clients and employees) was the important part. I've always been a crafty person, so I found a variety of projects that give me the same feeling of creating something beautiful. I believe that is what my life's purpose truly is. And there will always be more to create. Maybe the best is yet to come, after all.

  • @wendyhandley9463
    @wendyhandley94633 ай бұрын

    I can't believe how articulate your description of this feeling is and at last I can actually accept it as something real that many people feel and have to deal with. I wanted to be a working, successful musician but life kinda made another basic plan for me, work, to eat, to live, so I shelved my dream and woke up at aged 58 to realize it was over, done. The thing that makes it so difficult is that two completely different people I knew along the way who I didn't consider being that good actually made it, one girl won tony awards and a Grammy believe it or not, and another guy I worked with is now and has been touring and working with a band on a world tour playing arenas...it's so hard to accept im not where they are, it hurts and i cannot talk to anyone about it cis they could never understand .....it makes it harder still that they got SO successful, so much it's hard to not hear about them, a constant reminder, .. thank you for talking about this i just couldnt believe my ears when i heard you , thank you, it helped to know it's natural and it's going to be a process...

  • @loftonrudolph7586
    @loftonrudolph75867 ай бұрын

    I've been trying to get through this for a couple of years. I am 68 and lived with ADHD undiagnosed my whole life and most of my goals were unattainable. I was too busy pleasing others and trying to prove that I was worthy.

  • @emmagoldman6616

    @emmagoldman6616

    7 ай бұрын

    Yup I hear you

  • @JoSpring

    @JoSpring

    7 ай бұрын

    Same. 😢

  • @joyslove3858

    @joyslove3858

    7 ай бұрын

    Likewise...you are not alone.

  • @roybatty3916

    @roybatty3916

    7 ай бұрын

    Same here

  • @ItaHayes

    @ItaHayes

    7 ай бұрын

    Me too.

  • @midoann
    @midoann7 ай бұрын

    Hi from 🇯🇵. I’m a psychologist in a small county city near Mt. Fuji. Being the only one here and around the other cities I have to help clients with a large variety of mental challenges, like a tiny small town old doctor. Long intro… I mainly want to say that is nice to listen to a well educated (seems like you are not only interested in the mind ) updated and coherent speaker. Thank you and wish luck in your path helping thousands of people with your channel. Arigatou 🙇🏻‍♀️🇯🇵

  • @howellbuzz
    @howellbuzz2 ай бұрын

    If there’s a more important video than this for all of humanity somewhere on KZread I haven’t found it.

  • @ranandiebraut7425

    @ranandiebraut7425

    Ай бұрын

    That's SO true

  • @greggin9116
    @greggin91166 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much!!🥺. I have been trying to figure out how to talk to my son about grieving the breakup of his marriage. He is so sad and depressed. He gets into the comparison mode far too often. (Ex: “all of my friends have a home, a wife and a couple of kids and I don’t have anything. Someone else is living the life I was supposed to have! He stole it from me and I’m left sitting here while life and everybody in it passes by and there is nothing I can do to change it!”) He’s 27 years old. He is kind, caring and would do whatever he could to help even a stranger. I’m sending him a link to your site and will encourage him to listen to you. Thank you again

  • @PaigeNewberry
    @PaigeNewberry7 ай бұрын

    I am a therapist in Texas, and I really want to thank you for this video. Not only do I see this ambiguous grief with my clients, I’ve also had tremendous ambiguous grief in my own life. And you’re right… Nobody really understands the difference between the two types of grief, nor do they understand that this type of grief is actually more difficult to deal with. I would say for me… it is more painful. I’m going to send your video to my colleagues and family. Thanks for what you’re doing in the world!

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing Paige!

  • @soongwriter
    @soongwriter2 ай бұрын

    I had a dream to be a song writer from a very young age, I was talented at other things, but hyper focused on this " song writing" (not rock star) goal. And now I'm turning 52 in June & I'm starting to feel this grief. "Everything I thought I had has turned from worst to bad'.

  • @mimig365
    @mimig3652 ай бұрын

    I spent a lifetime trying to achieve my ‘dreams’, always failing/having the rug pulled out from under me just as I was about to succeed, but still trying over and over, until I finally figured out why my dreams weren’t coming to fruition; now I’m 76 yrs old and exhausted, alone, and disheartened, grieving in an abyss, with only continuous nothingness to show for all that expended energy…what hurts the most is that while using my energy towards helping everyone, children, relatives, friends, even strangers, achieve their dreams, when it came to having my dreams come true, NO ONE helped me, instead certain people went out of their way to literally destroy my every effort, now I’m just too tired to care anymore…

  • @lisaleone2296
    @lisaleone22967 ай бұрын

    I feel like I understand this. My brother died when he was 23, and my parents and sister and I became very close but moved away from the rest of the family and didn't see them much over the ensuing 30 years. My sister died 3 years ago unexpectedly, when she was 44 and I was 48. She and I never married or had kids, we always spent our holidays with our parents and my mom visited often. We always considered ourselves "young at heart" with plenty of time, just two girls and their mom going on cruises and doing crafts and whatnot, and dad always there to fix things and carve the turkey. After grieving the loss of my sister, who was my best friend, I realized that my parents are now over 80 and in failing health and when they die, I will be all alone. If something happens to me, there's nobody to take care of me, I am on my own. I went into a very deep depression because of this realization. All of my friends have children and besties and life partners, and they don't understand why I can't pull out of this depression.

  • @jh9391

    @jh9391

    6 ай бұрын

    Same here. No one left.

  • @Opal5674

    @Opal5674

    6 ай бұрын

    I've got that too. I was the first kid born in 29 years in my family and so they have died off as they were all 29 to 50 plus years older than me. I'm 37. Have an autistic son who severe enough Idk if he will ever hold a job or be able to care for himself when something happens to me. I've loaded up on life insurance money amd am paying off this house so he will at least have that.

  • @AngelBien

    @AngelBien

    6 ай бұрын

    Hello Lisa, your story touched me deeply. Thank you for sharing it. Please stay strong and find ways to have joy and believe the lie that you have to be alone. 48 is still relatively young to go and find people. Exhaust all the help you can find! Volunteer at the church, scream at God to help. I promise to pester Him everyday with my prayers for the next two weeks at least. You still have half your life to live through so make the most of it! You sound like a wonderful woman and you deserve to have a great life. I only have sisters too so reading about your sister dying struck a cord with me. She would want you to seize every moment. (Also if this is not weird, you would be surprised how many older gentlemen out there want to find a wife closer to their age). Whatever you do, don’t lose hope!

  • @AngelBien

    @AngelBien

    6 ай бұрын

    Also, I worked at an orphanage before, you would be surprised how much a little love can help those kids. Not a bad idea to volunteer. You lived a beautiful 48 years with your family, it’s not really a loss. Time for new adventures!

  • @halcyon-cg2eb

    @halcyon-cg2eb

    5 ай бұрын

    @@AngelBien Love your reply so much : )

  • @denisek292
    @denisek2927 ай бұрын

    MS is a disease that’s taken away my nursing career, ability to support myself, friends who don’t understand symptoms, energy, quality of life, etc. I’m 53, and have had MS since I was 30. Disability came quickly, causing me no choice but to retire. The life I had before this disease was fulfilling, and my energy was w/o bounds. I don’t go searching for grief, but I miss my caree, and it’s not coming back. Grieving is an ongoing process. I don’t cry everyday. I don’t think about what I’ve lost everyday, but I do cry at leaast once every two weeks.

  • @klanderkal

    @klanderkal

    3 ай бұрын

    Loss of career job us extremely difficult to accept.!! Your work & workplace is living the life you loved! Without it... the pain is unbearable!,... I feel you're Grief on this... 🙏 for you .!

  • @josephgiri2398

    @josephgiri2398

    3 ай бұрын

    I"m reading a book currently, titled "How to Heal yourself when no one else can. It's by Amy Scher.. it's helped me a great deal. This woman had a life situation similar to yours.. Keep up the fight.. Namaste

  • @noneofurbusiness5223

    @noneofurbusiness5223

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@josephgiri2398 Thanks. Just bookmarked it.

  • @klanderkal

    @klanderkal

    3 ай бұрын

    Wow,... I feel a part of you're pain. The part of loosing you're career job!. To my neighbors and even family,... they don't understand how hurt I am, not being able to continue doing my career job,.. the friends, the purpose, the structure etc. I missed it so bad, I fell into Depression and anxiety, I don't want to do anything anymore,.. and lost all interests. Take care 🎉

  • @down-to-earth-mystery-school

    @down-to-earth-mystery-school

    3 ай бұрын

    I have fibromyalgia, and my health recently got worse. Trying to accept that I may never heal my body, that I may have to live like this…

  • @iotaayushshrivastava114
    @iotaayushshrivastava1146 ай бұрын

    Thanks doc. People are born two times in this life. The first when they are born normally and have dreams etc. The second time they're born is when they realise time is finite, they're mortals and dreams big time are never statistically going to turn out in real world. Grief is a stronger motivator than regret. That's why people who couldn't cross two town blocks to ask if you're fine when you are alive fly from miles around to put flowers on your coffin when you're de☠️d.💐

  • @heatherjackson2675
    @heatherjackson267518 күн бұрын

    For whomever is viewing this post don't give up hope... because With God all things are possible

  • @sonjebianca2483
    @sonjebianca24837 ай бұрын

    I’ve struggled with this type of grief since becoming disabled due to chronic illness about 20 years ago. The word “ambiguous” just seems too gentle to describe the emotional pain and inner turmoil of being alive and yet “shelved” at such an early age. I’ve tried so many times, fallen and bounced back up, but at 59, the bounce is gone. I’m fresh out of ideas and feel as though I’m just waiting around to die.

  • @attheranch873

    @attheranch873

    7 ай бұрын

    Same here. I have depression that’s treatment resistant now. I’m waiting for Ketamine to come back on the market so I can get help for it. I’ll have to wait a few more months and it’s hard to keep going.🤷

  • @jimicunningable

    @jimicunningable

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm sure we are different, but my injuries make me want to wish you the best. 🎉

  • @Portia620

    @Portia620

    7 ай бұрын

    🙏😢

  • @falconbritt5461

    @falconbritt5461

    7 ай бұрын

    And if you try to explain it to people, they think you're asking them to tell you things will change if you just get a more positive attitude, that you just need a pep talk. Or they accuse you of whining and tell you how much worse some other people have it. Or tell you to look on the bright side or to keep your hopes up because everything could still change. People dish up lack of listening, lack of support, lack of understanding, and lack of respect (when they automatically assume you haven't tried over and over and over and over in every conceivable way, repeatedly mustering every bit of positive thinking, hope, ambition, faith, and massive effort and self belief yet STILL repeatedly failed, slammed hard into concrete time after time after time after time). No wonder people don't talk about these griefs. People seem to by and large have no genuine capacity to hear others with genuine compassion.

  • @lisamay5649

    @lisamay5649

    7 ай бұрын

    @@falconbritt5461 People don't seem to realize that your grief is very real and valid or that you had dreams and ambitions to make your life fulfilling and complete. They don't realize how much that meant to you. People like you and I want to grow and progress. That's the way life is supposed to be. Yet, when we merely mention how disappointed and disillusioned we are about our lives, people don't want to hear it. Too many lack empathy. Our world needs more compassion and love for one another. KNOW THAT I HEAR YOU! Thank you for sharing your story.

  • @peachyreen4550
    @peachyreen45507 ай бұрын

    Thank you for mentioning being the parent of a disabled child can come with so much grieving. There’s so many layers to it though. It’s the absolute worst because I fought for him for years & years & years and we still lost. I grieve because he doesn’t get to experience the joys that other teens do. Driving, a girlfriend, first job, graduation, he doesn’t even have any friends. And even though I love my son, it affects so many parts of everyday life and any future I worked for, the relationship I wanted, the master’s degree program I had to drop out of… because I’m on this journey alone. There is NO closure

  • @stellafraser8351

    @stellafraser8351

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel for you. I also have a disabled son who is in same position. I worry for him so much🙁

  • @alexstokowsky6360

    @alexstokowsky6360

    7 ай бұрын

    I know it probably doesn't feel similar to most, but parents of drug addicts have to grieve their losses too. There may be a chance things will resolve, but that chance is not in their hands, and that chance gets smaller and down to practically nothing over time. In the meantime, there is that adult person they cannot control, doing damage to themselves and the World. There is always the "coulda, woulda, shoulda" too and the very harsh judgement of others with no sympathy.

  • @ak5659

    @ak5659

    7 ай бұрын

    My issues are trivial compared to yours, but I do understand the the knowledge that there never will be closure.

  • @TAGtalkinaboutGod

    @TAGtalkinaboutGod

    7 ай бұрын

    Wait until you recognize you are a very big reason your child is disabled....! Your Consciousness inflicted this upon his Consciousness in the womb! I guarantee you I can tell you where you've gone amiss in your life, which causes all the "issues" you accept as real...!! Wake Up to Your Infinite Omnipresence!!

  • @tinakaminskadickinson3328

    @tinakaminskadickinson3328

    7 ай бұрын

    Ditto. My son became a paraplegic at 18. He’s now 40. The things they miss out on never ends.

  • @geogriapeach5211
    @geogriapeach5211Ай бұрын

    Thank you. So true. 20 years single. Struggling on my own. Exhausted.

  • @SN-sz7kw
    @SN-sz7kw4 ай бұрын

    Ambiguous grief. Thank you for naming it & acknowledging something so devastating. I have to say honestly it doesn’t feel ambiguous to me. It is the loss of a dream as dear as anything one dedicates their life to. All the harder to bear if unreconciled injustice is involved. Not being able to coherently voice the devastation or grieve compounds the pain. I’ve come to detest the saying, “What doesn’t break you, makes you stronger.” Actually, sometimes it just eventually breaks you, but you have the crushing burden of protecting others by pretending it hasn’t. I am beginning to visualize the loss as a path that cuts off or fades out into the mist. Something that never fully existed, but I honorably followed as far as was possible, despite any obstacles. This somehow gives me solace, suggesting there may be other rewarding paths nearby that I can switch to, leading to places & results I haven’t, even at 60, yet imagined.

  • @emilys3458
    @emilys34587 ай бұрын

    Holy cow. I just experienced this. At the age of 58, I realize the dream I held and nurtured my entire life was not going to happen. It really did feel like I was punched in the soul. I recognize it what was happening, grieving/mourning . It was pure hell. I got through it, but it was the most depressing,awful experience I’ve gone through in decades.

  • @teresaring8049

    @teresaring8049

    6 ай бұрын

    I just have now realized I have so many dreams I have to let go of. How did you go through your grief… do you have any suggestions thank you.

  • @jennytaylor3324

    @jennytaylor3324

    5 ай бұрын

    Not pretending to know what that dream was, but the way it felt strongly indicates that it might not be true for you (having to let go of dreams). The truth sets us free, it doesn't kick us in the soul!

  • @MsLinda165
    @MsLinda1657 ай бұрын

    I had a sense of this back in childhood. People say "you can't miss what you didn't know" but this is not true. Our imagination can give us ideas that we can become attached to, and when these ideas don't materialize, the grief can be overwhelming, especially as we age, and realize our days are seriously numbered. I think hard work and staying curious are the best ways to deal with loss. When night falls and I've filled my day with hard work, whilst also feeding my curiosity about a variety of subjects, can ameliorate the sense of loss, and provide purpose. There is no time or energy left to compare myself with others.

  • @tinapoulton233
    @tinapoulton2333 ай бұрын

    Thankyou. I have kids with disabilities and I feel this so much. I love them and appreciate them if course, but people don't understand the grief and aldo the fear that goes hand in hand with this. Everytime they have a birthday or go through another period in their life that reminds me they will never have the life I wanted for them. They will never drive or get married and have children. Worse, I fear one day I won't be able to care for them and have to trust other humans to take on my role. I live with fear and grief every day. I also miss them being small because it was so much simpler then.

  • @Jeff-ty1ek
    @Jeff-ty1ek2 ай бұрын

    I went through exactly what you described about 30 years ago. No-one knew what I was talking about, including doctors and psychologists. Very painful experience. I called it 'My point of Realisation'. Well done for illuminating this issue.

  • @Wedrowanie
    @Wedrowanie7 ай бұрын

    Two weeks ago I tried to end this all. Yesterday I was brave enough to ask for help. Today THIS video pops up on my feed. Things happen for a reason. All I can say is THANK YOU ❤.

  • @mikjb

    @mikjb

    6 ай бұрын

    Am so glad you reached out for help. Consider yourself hugged. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Wedrowanie

    @Wedrowanie

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank you ❤. Sending a big hug your way.

  • @jennytaylor3324

    @jennytaylor3324

    5 ай бұрын

    Glad you ended up staying - which is way harder. I sometimes think the minute-to-minute would be so much easier if we knew we only had to do it for a week or something! I think the desolation and terror come flooding in when we try to mentally live our lives in advance, with our imagined futures. We like to know where we're going, and have an imagined future where we're not alone.

  • @Diablogato69

    @Diablogato69

    4 ай бұрын

    Never give up. You’re a fighter. Try, try and try harder… that’s what we are put in the earth for.. sending you love & many blessings ❤

  • @mikjb

    @mikjb

    4 ай бұрын

    You are still in my prayers. But doing it and not reminding you of that fact now and then seems silly. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @coolaunt516
    @coolaunt5167 ай бұрын

    As the number of aging people increases this is going to become a HUGE issue. Those of us in that group will need all the coping skills we can get.

  • @gretafields4706

    @gretafields4706

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes. Go hear Dr. Eilers' tslk on shutting down. Aging causes you to pile up tint stresses which, like dirty dishes, overwhelm you. I think it can kill you early. If you dont stay active, your body and mibd atrophy faster. I want to die in my sleep at age 104-6, not age 70.

  • @timm1139

    @timm1139

    7 ай бұрын

    Agreed, but people of ALL ages can suffer from this type of loss. I’ve been there.

  • @katzygolf

    @katzygolf

    7 ай бұрын

    True at any age but at the end time speeds up as we slow down & lose touch with friends & activities. Too bad we can't have this insight & watchfulness when we are young so we can analyze & consider wisest paths, trusting our wisdom gained through trials.

  • @arabellacox

    @arabellacox

    7 ай бұрын

    @timm1139 you're right! The age I felt this the greatest was when I became a teenager.

  • @bonnieragain2708

    @bonnieragain2708

    7 ай бұрын

    P

  • @ellencha5975
    @ellencha59755 ай бұрын

    It's unreal how close to my feelings you get everytime I hear you speak.I had a horrible childhood. married early to get out of that house. had lousy marriage with nothing but turmoil for many reasons. Started over at 45 with three teenage childrren, worked my butt off to survive and save money to be able to travel and go places once I was retired. Retired with enough money but my health makes it impossible for me to travel. And for some reason I am now completely devastated that I was never loved. I spent years just thinking it was right around the corner and I would eventually meet someone. I feel so alone just waiting to die. All counselors say get over with it and journal about it. Be thankful for what you have. Just reading comments makes me feel shallow for feeling sad about my loses because they come no where near others. But can I get mad at what I never had? Because I'm mad all the time now.

  • @ShirleyMcalpine
    @ShirleyMcalpine6 ай бұрын

    At 74 years old, I was born into grief. The first two years were supposedly perfect, then my father's suicide. I imagine, that I've said it all to understand that I have lived a life of loss. Nearing the end myself, I believe that I'm going to build an altar to loss itself. Acknowledging this openly, I believe will bring a healing closure. Are you coming to my life at the perfect time? Yes! And I thank you for this insight into myself.

  • @mlkennedy67111
    @mlkennedy671117 ай бұрын

    Wow. You so succinctly described what life has felt like since March 2018. After almost 20 years of marriage, out of the blue, my husband asked for a divorce. My dream of retiring and growing old together vanished. What hurt the most? The first thing that people assumed was that he was cheating or wanting to see someone else. He just didn't want to be married anymore. We rarely fought and I thought his "needing space" was just a phase in the marriage. I don't think I've ever felt more devastated in my life. I still feel like I'm processing the fact that I lost my home, my financial stability, many friends, etc. I've been seeing a therapist for about a year and have some established coping skills due to previous treatment for childhood abuse and trauma. I'm dating but it's really hard learning how to trust again. I still have bouts of extreme anxiety and depression. So ready to be healed... Grief is exhausting.

  • @wendyface6473

    @wendyface6473

    3 ай бұрын

    I left 3 fiancee's.. cause it wasn't going to work out. Maybe I was afraid. But at 49. I have a hard time trusting. Friends too. People just leave.

  • @violetgc6049
    @violetgc60497 ай бұрын

    You know, it's so tricky, because my midlife crisis involved becoming aware that the version of myself in my head that was larger than life - a famous musican, a noted scholar, a thrower of regular dinner parties, a "perfect" mother...when I realized that version in my head was just dreamstuff and not the real life I was actually living, my brain and heart broke. I realized that I'd been "future faking" and moving towards this glorious future that was more like a child's daydreams rather than concrete achievable adult goals. It was very humbling and to realize this and I felt a lot of shame and embarrassment when I realized I had been overlying this groovy sexy cool movie version of my life, that existed only in my head, on top of mundane reality. I don't think it was grandiose so much as youthful pizzazz and hope. But I just never thought that my hope and fantasizing would ever end. Until this epiphany, I had comported myself with so much swagger. I "felt" like the version of myself in my head, and I had confidence, direction and motivation that was derived from my belief in myself as that version in my mind. When midlife hit me and I realized I was getting more tired, more weary, more achy, more chubby -- when aging really starting to kick my ass -- I found the dreams dying. I tried to fight this for awhile. I drank pretty heavily for awhile, attempting to stay "happy" and hold onto those youthful feelings of potential and possibilities. Here's the rub - it was the belief in that ephemeral dreamstuff, those idealistic hopes that allowed me to function at a high level and experience motivation and joy for as long as I did. Now the question is, from the disillusioned, depleted, wounded, bedraggled, humbled place I am at right now, is it possible to readjust and find new dreams that are actually still attainable? Or at least activities and hobbies that bring joy, if not acclaim? Do I have the energy or the faith to make these adjustments? This is the challenge before each of us.

  • @thereisnosanctuary6184

    @thereisnosanctuary6184

    7 ай бұрын

    It's not a midlife crisis if you die soon.

  • @m.woodsrobinson9244

    @m.woodsrobinson9244

    6 ай бұрын

    I think every great dream has to be one that can be changed to fit in to our reality. Life is not a fixed, concrete thing. Dreams shouldn't be, either. Eat the meat of your dreams. The parts of it you can do, go for it. If it's a bone, toss it out! ❤

  • @willowsmom5757

    @willowsmom5757

    6 ай бұрын

    GREAT comment. What do you do if you stop dreaming.

  • @davehill584

    @davehill584

    6 ай бұрын

    That is so well put and exactly where I'm at.

  • @jennytaylor3324

    @jennytaylor3324

    5 ай бұрын

    Well, i suppose you guarantee that no aspect of them will ever materialise. I often wonder how differently we'd all function if we didn't know how old we were, without the received beliefs of others based on that age, and with no attachment to the outcome of the things we do. In other words, think the way children do - without limitations and doing everything just for fun.@@willowsmom5757

  • @rsoulinternet
    @rsoulinternetАй бұрын

    I think acceptance is the key to dealing with this kind of thing. Acceptance is *not* pretending it's fine or downlplaying any unhappiness you feel, but just acknowledging the situation and clearing mental space to consider that there are other fulfilling things you could do.

  • @helenhighwater5313
    @helenhighwater53136 ай бұрын

    I've come to know that when a dream is starved long enough it will die but it also will leave behind little prickly things that jab your soul whenever you see the same dream having been fulfilled in someone else's life.

  • @friendlypiranha774
    @friendlypiranha7747 ай бұрын

    Wow, a doctor with REAL, practical, down-to-earth advice. If he carries on like this, he will put a lot of other doctors out of work.

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    7 ай бұрын

    I’m trying to follow the Alex Hormozi strategy: “Make your free content better than their paid content.” ❤️

  • @RuthKirkpatrick

    @RuthKirkpatrick

    7 ай бұрын

    You're accomplishing that totally. @@DrScottEilers

  • @friendlypiranha774

    @friendlypiranha774

    7 ай бұрын

    @@DrScottEilers - that is very admirable, Good Sir, and appreciated by your 35400 subscribers. Thank you.

  • @philphilips1020

    @philphilips1020

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@dr.scotteilerspsydlp529 I like that quote but had never heard of Alex, so I did some quick research. I could be wrong but he initially strikes me as a used car salesman with a snake oil side gig.

  • @mimimcdee7052

    @mimimcdee7052

    7 ай бұрын

    @@DrScottEilers A caring heart...with common sense does make the difference. Thank you for being there :)

  • @michelleferguson5364
    @michelleferguson53647 ай бұрын

    Thanks for explaining the grief of not having something you aways wanted. I wanted a child so badly. It never happened I just couldn't get pregnant. I still feel very sad about this. It hurts badly. I am 60 years old. And the pain still lingering inside. Thanks for taking about this.

  • @itsjudystube7439

    @itsjudystube7439

    7 ай бұрын

    Me too. 65. Just never happened.

  • @Portia620

    @Portia620

    7 ай бұрын

    😢

  • @susanwilliams70

    @susanwilliams70

    7 ай бұрын

    Your story could be mine (I'm 62 now). I too dreamed I'd have kids. Never happened & adoption didn't work out. Always feel a deep sadness when I am reminded of this (& pain & anger when others said we better get moving in my 30s).

  • @luckydevil1601

    @luckydevil1601

    7 ай бұрын

    Im 33, but I guess this will be my story. Chances are close to zero.

  • @leolady6588

    @leolady6588

    7 ай бұрын

    Me too. 51. But I let it go. Healthier for my marriage. I was upset for a long time. Then hormones settled down and time passes. I got busy. I went back to study. So many disappointments of things I'll never experience, but I wasn't prepared to give it all my energy, time and anger. I found positive replacemnt focus. I wasn't factoring on being chosen by a young man 22 years my junior who came into my life 10 years ago to be his mentor. The connection is karmic. Absolutely meant to be a chosen mother and kindred spirit for him. We have fun together. We enjoy many similar interests and have lots in common. As strange as that sounds, I have now stopped questioning and worrying what it looks like. We are chosen family. You find other ways to do things like mothering. Acceptance of life is easier now. Sometimes there are no easy answers. You just gotta roll with what life throws you and find comfort in the small and simple joys. Wallowing sucks my energy. I try not to dwell. I live in the now and only short term plan because by 51 it took me this long to learn that life happens while you're planning it, and all the best plans usually don't go to plan, so best thing is to live it to the full with as much positivity you can muster. There is little that is secure or guaranteed. Bad health also taught me that. Along with serious surgery that really shook me. Life is so short. I won't spend time crying over things that were obviously not meant to be.

  • @bevybaby1000
    @bevybaby10002 ай бұрын

    I appreciate everybody being so honezt. I never knew that I wasn't alone. People don't talk about this in my day to day. I just know I'm sick of the self loathing. Thank you for your truths.I t helps to know that I'm not alone.

  • @russellsantana
    @russellsantana2 ай бұрын

    Lost my younger sister 2 years ago in a sudden way, and although we spoke fairly regularly, I never got to say goodbye or see her in the 2 years prior to her death. This "ambiguous grief" sounds a lot like what I'm still going through. Thanks for this content.

  • @NothingByHalves
    @NothingByHalves7 ай бұрын

    Possibly the best video on grief that I've ever seen. The realisation I was too old to have kids of my own hit me like a brick in 2016 and triggered an enormous breakdown. As it turns out, I have been a master of repressing my emotions throughout my entire life, and this loss finally tipped me over the edge. What hit me the hardest was the feeling of shame for being so stupid at believing I could have what I wanted - and that tends to put a halt on having hope for the future too, like, I'm not going to be that naive again. The beauty of videos like these (in addition to the fabulous content) is reading through the comments feed and seeing that none of us are alone in this. How very human of us all. And for all those grieving, I honour your loss. Sending big hugs.

  • @lindamcmahan4686

    @lindamcmahan4686

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing your insight, I have also suppressed my emotions my entire life and am trying to figure out how to feel them and deal with them now. Loss of a job for the first time in a 35 year career pushed me over the edge, trying to figure life out. Sending prayers and positive thoughts to you.

  • @NothingByHalves

    @NothingByHalves

    7 ай бұрын

    @@lindamcmahan4686 I lost my job ten years ago and despite trying to get several things launched, with the breakdown and then the lockdowns I still haven't found my "thing" (although I am starting to feel into it now). It's very disorienting when you're not a part of "something" and can feel very isolating and directionless, so I get how very confusing that can be. Take a balanced approach to dealing with your repressed emotions so you don't get swamped or stuck in a hole (like me, for way too long). Make sure you do something to lift yourself up (you more than deserve it!) and give yourself the time to heal, at which point life will start to open up again. This may be the start of something amazing because now you get to choose - without the repressed emotions in the way you will be more of yourself than ever before. Sending massive hugs and thanks for your beautiful reply xx

  • @JuniperStudios

    @JuniperStudios

    Ай бұрын

    “The feeling of shame for being so stupid..” You just gave me the words for what haunts me.

  • @NothingByHalves

    @NothingByHalves

    Ай бұрын

    @@lindamcmahan4686 Hi Linda. I'm not sure how I previously missed your comment but I've spotted it now... Thank you so much for the prayers and positive thoughts. It really isn't easy learning how to deal with emotions when they've been tucked away out of sight for so long. I know the theory of how we did that, but it still doesn't make sense to me how we actually did! I hope you are managing to figure everything out and sending prayers and positive thoughts in return. xx

  • @NothingByHalves

    @NothingByHalves

    Ай бұрын

    @@JuniperStudios There is way too much shame in the world and I figure everyone has their own source. We are all a mess, and a miracle. For everything we feel ashamed and stupid for, there is something we achieved that others will have failed at and are feeling ashamed and stupid for themselves. It's worth a reminder every now and again of where we are not so flawed after all... Sending love xx

  • @Brindapr
    @Brindapr7 ай бұрын

    Thank you for talking about this. I'm Indian, and my mom manipulated and coerced me into the medical profession. I had always wanted to be an engineer. After 6 years of medical school, I knew I couldn't go back and change things, it was too late, I grieved the loss of a dream.

  • @nisansala100

    @nisansala100

    6 ай бұрын

    Unless you are already over 50 years, you might be able to do something about it.

  • @nancyb4018

    @nancyb4018

    6 ай бұрын

    Even at 50, think Master’s in BioEngineering. Your experience will transfer.

  • @timmotel5804
    @timmotel580422 күн бұрын

    Good Day. I do, so understand and agree with you. I can completely relate to and feel that grief, all of my life. I'm 72 now. So far it's been a pretty good "run". However, the one thing that I have always wished/wanted is unattainable. "Oh Well"... My wife has a saying about me: "Repress, Replace and Move On". But to a degree that is a safety measure and a fact of life. I'm happy, healthy and at peace in my life, as best as i can be. Thanks for posting this and bringing it to light and putting a name on it, for a great many of us. Best Regards

  • @harrymills2770
    @harrymills2770Ай бұрын

    Comparison can be a source of joy. No matter how bad things get or how far I fall short of my dreams, most people have it worse than I have it, and most of them are pretty content.

  • @makaroniravioli1577
    @makaroniravioli15776 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this! It's like it unlocked something inside of me. I feel like I am hugging each one of the people in the comment section, cry with them about our shattered dreams, and than give a warm smile, hold hands and say " it's ok, we have each other, we are not alone in this, despite the fact, that we feel devastatingly alone at times". Thank you again, from the bottom of my heart!

  • @alimuchenik9807

    @alimuchenik9807

    2 ай бұрын

    You're so sweet. Thank you. Yes, venting here and relating to others' comments has helped me a lot.

  • @helensavvides6582

    @helensavvides6582

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you too. x

  • @janniechoquette8828
    @janniechoquette88286 ай бұрын

    I've had several dreams of how my life was supposed to be. Approaching 70 I look around and wonder what happened. Friends tell me to let go of the past, great times ahead but I feel frozen in time. Thank you for naming this. And helping make sense of why i find it so hard to create a new life when i know there are few years left. I'm starting today with laundry and walking my dog. You are a gift! Thank you.

  • @rcjdeanna5282

    @rcjdeanna5282

    3 ай бұрын

    Grandma Moses began painting at 78 just for fun....you might think of adopting an old dog some heartless person dumped at the shelter. I love PG Wodehouse and dreamed I might get a companion for my dog and went out and did it...a 12 year old Aussie I named PG. Bless you... somebody needs you or you wouldn't be here.

  • @martinmerrill5366

    @martinmerrill5366

    2 ай бұрын

    Well said

  • @cattypatti360
    @cattypatti3602 ай бұрын

    I remember the day I realized that "someday" is gone. Worse than grieving human loss, as a piece of myself is truly dead.

  • @michellem4287
    @michellem4287Ай бұрын

    This is especially hard for the disabled. We didn't just lose our dreams. We lost our independence and regular abilities. Then people act like we never had dreams to begin with. Disability is not retirement. I wanted to travel the world when I retired, but that's impossible now. I like the idea of holding a ceremony to grieve.

  • @sarahmanzo4761

    @sarahmanzo4761

    Ай бұрын

    We didn't lose our dreams, they were stolen from us.

  • @phmiraclecleanse
    @phmiraclecleanse7 ай бұрын

    I remember the day I realized it WAS too late. Been a changed man ever since. No life partner, no kids, no dream job, no life. While some small elements of those things could be realized, there’s still a mourning of the big picture that wasn’t and won’t be. And in many ways it feels like I won’t have a chance at changing who I’m being and where I’m going until I deal with that grief. Really appreciate the comments down below here.

  • @maryannlupus2187
    @maryannlupus21877 ай бұрын

    This video is incredibly affirming. I will never forget the wave of loss and grief that hit me when in my early twenties I realized that it was literally too late for me to ever have a childhood best friend because I was no longer a child, and hadn’t been one for some time. It was something I grew up watching my sibling have, and that I’d spent almost my entire life up to that point hoping and dreaming that I would have someday. I didn’t know what to call it, but my grief over the loss of that dream was so profound that it made me very aware of how much it can hurt when our dreams die.

  • @patriciagootgeld9273

    @patriciagootgeld9273

    6 ай бұрын

    Don't feel bad about that. I had a "childhood friend" for 44 years, and when she betrayed my trust and caused me harm and distress, I realized she had never heard, felt, or seen me. It was like a death after I ended it. But there was never any substance to it to begin with. So now, no regrets. I am a hermit now.

  • @moody4844
    @moody48442 ай бұрын

    OMG, I literally just had ambiguous grief. I totally shut down and could not get out of bed for weeks. Wow, the fact that I found this video right after going through this is amazing. Keep doing the great work you are doing with this channel.

  • @vinaanderson9599
    @vinaanderson95992 ай бұрын

    I work with very high needs adults. I see parents grieve for the child they expected to have at 30. And for grandchildren that will never happen. I also see adults who experience dissability due to illness or injury as adults who need to grieve for the future they planned to have and is now not possible.