With time, the waves of sadness caused by loss are less frequent. Or at least, as a friend told me recently, we eventually accept that grief may not leave us altogether, a sign of all the love it represents, but it can cohabitate with the joy of memories. More recently, in September 2020, Vanity Fair published an article by Jesmin Ward titled On Witness and Respair: A Personal Tragedy Followed by Pandemic. It is a keen account of Ward losing her husband in which she also talks about how the BLM Movement brought life to her in the desperate times of grief, “…as protesters chanted and stomped, as they grimaced and shouted and groaned, tears burned my eyes. They glazed my face.” Eventually, the corners of the house we sometimes see with eyes from the past remind us of happy times and precious moments. Eventually, as Maggie Smith says, we keep moving.

Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 61Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 52Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 45Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 3Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 92Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 47Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 78Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 74Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 14Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 61Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 90Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 47Best Books on Grief  In Time of Loss  Go to the Literature - 70