The capacity to give one's attention to a sufferer is a very rare and difficult thing; it is almost a miracle; it is a miracle.
-Simone Weil

I walked numbly down the steps of the funeral home, squinting as I reached the bright afternoon sun. People moved all around me, pushing strollers, walking dogs, searching pockets for car keys, talking on cell phones, looking into store windows, laughing. They were completely oblivious.

My mother and I had just spent the past hour at the mortuary, making arrangements for my father’s remains. The funeral director had worked steadily though his list: What should be in the obituary? Should the paper run the listing for two days or three? Here are several forms we need to complete. Could you please sign here? And here? Would you like to pick up the ashes or should we deliver them to the church? Do you want the clothes he was wearing? Because he was a veteran, he is eligible for a flag. We are so sorry for your loss! Will you be paying with a check or credit card?

Many memories remain from that afternoon. Most of all, as I left the funeral home, I wondered how all of these people could be going about their business as though nothing had happened. Doesn’t everyone feel this numbness – this incredible weight – just as I do? How can they be rushing about at such a time?

There is value, writers tell us, in these intense, shared experiences. Eventually, each of us is temporarily overwhelmed, however briefly, by personal or shared loss. Like most people, I slowly returned to “normal,” shaking loose the shroud that had pressed down on me. Occasionally, the sensation revisits me, stopping me in my tracks for just a moment.

Not long ago, I was walking down the hallway on one of our hospital inpatient units when I felt the old twinge.

Behind some of these doors, I realized, there are people having cataclysmic experiences. It is possible that the man in this room has been given terrible news. A woman in that room might suddenly have realized that her husband is never coming home. Just down the hall, a young family could be coming to terms with a series of difficult and life-altering treatments. Next to the nursing station, a young child is being led to a bedside, perhaps to say goodbye.

At the same moment, out in the hallway, I am having a trivial conversation with a colleague, smiling as I hear laughter around the corner. I plan out the rest of my day, trying to save enough time to grab lunch and complete my operative notes before I head to clinic. Later, I will head home after I have finally checked everything off my list.

On this day, I am one of the oblivious ones.


The following is feedback received for this blog:

This post reminded me of when I lost my father just two years ago. It seemed the whole world was asleep as we left the ICU at St. Luke's in Milwaukee at about 3:20 a.m. Only a couple of stoic nurses were stationed at computers and everything was dark, with the exception of blinking lights and monitors. Heads down, we were a sobbing mass of humanity making our way through the abandoned hallways. When we emerged outside after so many hours at vigil with him, it seemed the rest of the world was completely oblivious to our loss. (Call the funeral home, contact a priest, do this, do that.)

My father was a very sensitive guy. I recall him admonishing us kids when we visited him in the hospital many years ago, for making way too much noise. "Quiet," he said. "The people in the next room just got some bad news." We all experience the highs and lows of life, but a little empathy goes a long way.

- Steve B.



Fabulous post. Thank you. I'm so sorry for your loss. My grandmother slipped away in February. When I got that phone call to tell me, I simply said thank you. I asked when they wanted me to clear her room. They said there was no rush. I called my husband. I told my children their Great-Nan had gone. I called my father in South Africa (I'm in UK) to tell him. I called my other grandmother and several other family members.I called her lawyer who held her Power of Attorney. He told me to clear the room the next day! I remember looking back and thinking I worked through a process, step-by-step. You see, for me, the death had been coming on for 10 years as slowly as the Alzheimer's had been consuming her. I'd had to say goodbye to her 5 years earlier when she forgot who I was. In the remaining 5 years, she basically fell apart ending up bed-ridden and a mess. So when I did get the call, I was so relieved that she'd finally been released from all that misery and anguish. But then the processes begin. There's a certain groove you slot into to deal with phone calls, funeral directors, ministers, catering arrangements, florists, etc. etc. And once the whole shabang is over, then you realise that you did all that in a kind of haze. And gradually the numbness wears off and life resumes. It's a very strange experience.

- Jabulani



Beautiful post. I could complete relate when you said: Most of all, as I left the funeral home, I wondered how all of these people could be going about their business as though nothing had happened. Doesn't everyone feel this numbness - this incredible weight - just as I do? How can they be rushing about at such a time? I felt the same way at the loss of a loved one a few years ago. I always think I'm the only one thinking or feeling a certain way and it's nice to see that I'm not alone. Thank you for sharing!

- Jen



I am sorry about the loss of your Dad. I know you are a man of faith and so have the hope/expectation of seeing him again... but it hurts on this side because we miss them.

My mother died back in April and I am still in disbelief sometimes... even though elderly and declining in health.

You said you feel the sensation of losing him and I think of it as it comes in waves.

I have lost and cried over people I love... but nothing prepared me for losing my mother. Oh sure..intellectually you know it will hurt... but it is a profound sense of loss.

I consider myself empathetic and have been supportive of friends who've lost parents... but now having gone through it... I really know how much it hurts and think I should've done even more.

That 1st week was like I was in a timeless tunnel. now a thought will hit me out of the blue... and the pain of it washes over me like a wave and falls back again.

I understand your feelings. Those moments are surreal.

- SeaSpray
seaspray-itsawonderfullife.blogspot.com



So very true.

Strangely enough,we as human beings [social creatures] must still grieve at a very personal level,and all the rituals and procedures that follow may lessen the loss of a loved one,BUT amidst the deafening roar of life,we must grieve in equally deafening silence and in isolation.

- shantu patel

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About the Author

Bruce Campbell, MD, grew up in the Chicago area, graduating from Purdue University and Rush Medical College. He completed an otolaryngology residency at the Medical College of Wisconsin and a head and neck surgery fellowship at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. He was a faculty member, ENT specialist and surgeon with Froedtert & MCW health network from 1987 until his retirement in 2021.

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