Because
we all have to be a little brave sometimes…
Facing
the truth that I had to say goodbye to my mum to cancer last year
seemed to revert me back to a very scared five year old and I
reluctantly had to call on a whole new brave. Mum had to be the
bravest and truly was. My dad also brought a whole new brave that I
had never seen in him. He hadn’t been there when we were born for
fear of fainting so to see him nurse my mother and be such a rock
right up until that tender moment when she died and he took the ring
off her finger graduated him in my eyes to Super Hero status.
Like every love,
every loss is different and like every fear every brave is different
and we all have to be brave sometimes whether we like it or not. The
definition of Brave is ‘Being ready to face and endure danger or
pain, showing courage’. I respect that my experience pales in
comparison to others losses and that some may even disagree with the
fact that one is ‘brave’ during such times because you have no
choice but to just cope so when are you ever ‘ready’ to endure
danger or pain? I guess that my experience just made me question
feeling Brave, having courage and how I can prepare myself and my
children to be ready to face whatever life throws at us with love and
grace.
My
kids who are 6 and 4 obviously had lots of questions about death. We
had travelled from the UK to NZ to be with mum for her final 6 months
and lived with my sister who had lost her husband to a brain tumour 9
years ago. During our stay, a young boy in my daughter’s class
also sadly died so death became a very real concept for them. How
could I best answer their questions? This was perplexing to me but I
eventually found my answer…
A
very wise friend said that I needed to get my own story clear on
death and dying and that when that story was authentic to my heart, I
would feel ready to answer their questions. So I spent time on this
with myself and it was really refreshing for me to focus on what
story I choose to believe and live by and the perspective that this
has now brought to my life. I want to be open and honest with my
kids and to myself about death. I want us to observe the death and
transformation that we see every day to prepare us for the inevitable
change that life brings and to be at peace with the process of life.
Not
many people seem comfortable talking about death and it’s hard to
find good stories for kids about it so I am challenging myself to
write one that is hopefully authentic, delightful and makes some sort
of sense to the soul.
Loosing
mum was a wonderful rite of passage for me. It has made me braver in
following my heart and pursing my own dream launching ‘Feel Brave’
www.feelbrave.com
I
wanted to create characters and stories that help kids manage tough
emotions and feel brave because we all have to be a little brave
sometimes. I wanted to create new opportunities for adults to really
connect with kids because there is a special kind of magic when that
happens. I wanted to get kids excited about the potential for
happiness and their responsibility to find it themselves because the
only thing we truly have control over is the lens that we chose to
view our world through.
My
Mothers final lesson came silently to me as I sat looking at her with
unlimited gratitude for what she had given me and that was that when
there is love in your heart, you’re as brave as can be.
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