Chapter Five
Your Changed World

"Some things that fly there be.
Birds, hours, the bumblebees
Of these things no elegy
Some things that stay there be
Grief, hills, eternity
Nor this behooves me
There are that resting, rise
Can I expound the skies?
How still the riddle lies..."
These words of Emily Dickinson embrace the overwelming reality of Ken and Lorrie's losses upon the one-year anniversary of the accidental death of their two children.
During the course of therepy, they realized that friends and family had made a shift in their grief and perceived a sense of support. Frustration and sadness pushed Ken and Lorrie's need to communicate their experiences to those they loved.
A result of this realization was a letter, discussed in therapy, as a means to express their contiuing grief experience.
(Read The Book)