Today, countless people around the globe are celebrating the New Year with ritual, food, drink, music, and merriment. We will toss out the old and ring in the new. And this year, it seems that many people cannot rid themselves of the passing year fast enough. Peppered throughout my Facebook feed are messages like, \u201cI\u2019m so done with 2016\u201d. And parts of me agree. 2016 has been a year of sadness and loss for so many of us — on personal, communal, and societal levels. But I also know that endings of things \u2013 even the things we find distasteful \u2013 need to be honored.<\/span><\/p>\n For me, New Year\u2019s Eve is the perfect metaphor for how we often deal with death in our contemporary Western culture. We tend to rush toward new things \u2013 the new job, the new relationship, the new project \u2013 in an attempt to free ourselves from the experience of deep loss that is necessary to make way for new birth. In privileging everything that is shiny and new, we may have forgotten how to grieve fully that which is dying. Indeed, as a culture we ignore death and cling to life, particularly new life, in almost pathological ways.<\/span><\/p>\n When my son was an infant, a beloved family member of ours died suddenly, and we traveled to my husband\u2019s hometown for the services. One of our relatives, whose daughter was about the same age as my son, expressed surprise that we would bring our baby to all the visitations and ceremonies. \u201cWe don\u2019t want our daughter to know that much about death at this early age. We don\u2019t want to expose her to that too early.\u201d I have reflected on that conversation often in the intervening years. At that point in time, I was very ill; in fact, I was nearing the dying process, although I did not know it. Even without being aware of what would seem to be my own very imminent death, I was quite clear that death was one of the most important parts of life that I <\/span>did <\/span><\/i>want to introduce to my son. I always had known that I would not hide death from my children but would instead help them come to have their own personal relationships with death. I have continued to support their growing capacity to experience death and to grieve fully each person or situation that they lose.<\/span><\/p>\n Fifteen years after that event and just a few months after my return home from Mayo Clinic, as I was recovering from my second surgery and my third death walk, I received a text from a friend: \u201cI was too busy with my son to check in on your condition; I hope you understand\u201d. Someone close to me was enraged, wondering, \u201cHow could she not even care if you were dying or not?\u201d But I understood this friend. She was raising a toddler; her world was focused on his new life. And she simply did not want to introduce illness, death, or loss into her consciousness. During that death walk, another person who was close to me immediately went into denial of my situation as soon as she received the earliest reports of my failing health. Throughout my month-long death walk and well into my long recovery, she continued to remind me to \u201cjust keep my vibration high\u201d and other bromides that led me to believe that she was unable or unwilling to grasp the magnitude of loss that I was experiencing \u2013 or those that she was potentially experiencing through my dying process. Months after my recovery, she shared with me that she was unaware how severe my situation was; she had no idea that I was dying, even though she received all the same information as everyone else \u2013 that my heart and kidneys were failing, that I was moments away from being put on a heart and lung bypass machine as the doctors attempted to keep my heart beating just one more day, one more hour, one more moment.<\/span><\/p>\n Each of these approaches to loss \u2013 to ignore and to deny \u2013 are perfectly normal, as is almost every other response to loss. Those of us who work in end-of-life care or in bereavement support have seen behavior at all points of the spectrum between embracing loss and rejecting it. Healthy grief contains a multitude of expressions, and when we lose someone or something dear to us we often visit various features in the landscape of loss in our own unique manner.<\/span><\/p>\n Grief can become very complicated, however, when the losses we are experiencing exist simultaneously with new birth. Most of us gravitate toward the coming into being rather than honor the passing. But that which is lost and our grief related to it do not simply vanish when we place our attention on what is being born. Unacknowledged losses do not disappear; rather, we carry them around with us throughout our lifetimes. And for many of us, they will arise as we confront our final loss \u2013 that <\/span>of<\/span><\/i> our lifetime.<\/span><\/p>\n Each piece of unmetabolized grief that we ignore throughout our lifetimes has the potential to arise forcefully from our subconscious as we face our own death. Stephen Levine (1937-2016) was an American author, teacher, counselor, and end of life caregiver whose decades of work with the dying led to profound teachings about the dying and grieving processes (see http:\/\/levinetalks.com\/<\/a>). He witnessed the effects of lifetimes spent avoiding loss and grief:<\/span><\/p>\n For those unable to make peace with their pain, there was a gradual diminishment of their life force. It became obvious that it was not just the most recent griefs that underlay their intermittent depression and dysfunction but the imprint of losses long past \u2013 yet still painfully present (Levine, <\/span>Unattended Sorrow: Recovering from Loss and Reviving the Heart<\/span><\/i>. p. 2).<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n He discusses the weight of all such unexplored areas of grief in our lives:<\/span><\/p>\n From my twenty-five years working with the immediacy of grief in and around the deathbed, it gradually became evident how previous, unresolved loss seemed to intensify the blow of imminent death (Levine, p. 1).<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Like my relatives with their new baby, like the two people close to me during my most recent death walk, we may feel drawn to ignore those losses throughout our lifetimes; we may attempt to pretend that focusing only on what is new will somehow lead us out of grief. And the New Year provides an annual opportunity for us to practice this denial. As we gaze at the ball dropping and make our resolutions, we can push away the events of the old year just as we send trash to landfills.<\/span><\/p>\n