Tablets in mourning – crutch or dead end?
Today I tackle a topic that concerns many of you: Are tablets allowed to help when the heart breaks with grief? Or do we only treat the symptoms instead of healing the wound?
I experience again and again how desperately people are looking for relief: sleep aids, antidepressants, plant drops. And I say, Yes, psychotropic drugs can be right. As a grief attendant, I am basically in favour of them being used sensibly. But I also urge caution: What brings relief in the short term can drown out important signals from your heart.
25 years ago my brother took his own life. Without warning, without a farewell letter. My mother needed pills to survive at all. I was so shocked that I didn’t want any, out of pure fear. Until at some point I could not sleep anymore. Then, well accompanied by my doctor, I went for a while on herbal preparations.
What I learned from this: There is no right or wrong. But there is a difference between "keeping above water" and "healing the wound." That is what this text is about.
Imagine: You lie awake for hours, your head is racing, the memories feel like a tidal wave. No wonder that many in the family doctor's office ask for sedative drops or antidepressants.
The fact is: These drugs can be an emergency brake if the suffering pressure becomes unbearable. But they're not a cure. They keep you above water, you have to swim to the shore yourself.
Here's where it gets tricky: Grief is not depressionEven if the symptoms are similar. This is where the risk lies:
An example from my practice: One client took antidepressants for a year in order to "work". When she discontinued the pills, the grief came back – unprocessed and just as painful as on the first day. Time had not healed, it was frozen.
I do not want to make anyone feel guilty! I know the reservations: "You become dependent", "This only suppresses", "You have to endure grief". But here I oppose:
Would you expect someone to keep walking with a broken leg – without crutches? Of course not.
Grief can leave psychological injuries just as overwhelming as physical ones. When the pain floods you so that you can no longer breathe, think or sleep, psychotropic drugs are like crutches – they carry you until you have enough strength again.
But: They are not a substitute for grief work. They protect you from collapsing as you clear away the debris step by step. In other words, sometimes grief is like a storm that takes you into the sea. Psychotropic drugs can be the life-ring that keeps you above water – but you have to swim to the shore yourself. With every wave you dive through, you become stronger.
Medication is a tool, not a cure. They give you stability to handle therapy, conversations, or goodbyes.
Don’t worry: I don’t demand that you torment yourself "pure" through grief. But remember,
And here is something that many do not understand: in grief, time is different. It is not a calendar time, but a time of milestones – of thoughts felt to the end, recognized moments, times you have achieved. The suit does not get smaller, it is much too big. And you have to grow in there.
Medications can give you a breathing space – until you have strength again. And you know what? You can do that. Maybe not alone, maybe not overnight – but bit by bit, minute by minute.
If you’re wondering if tablets are right for you, ask yourself these questions:
And most importantly, Patience. With yourself, your environment, the waves of grief. It’s okay if you reach for the crutch in between – as long as you don’t forget that your heart can heal without it.
You are not alone.
If you are unsure or just want to talk, please contact me. And remember: grief is not a problem you have to solve – but a path you take step by step.
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Peter Hartmann says:
Sorrow is especially bad for me. After 66 years of marriage and love to lose a person, you can not just forget. It has been 5 months since my wife passed away. I still cry every day. I can’t put my wife’s things away either. For me, there is no solution.
Bo Hauer says:
Mr Hartmann,
What you write is very touching. 66 years together, that is a whole life full of common traces, memories and closeness. That the pain does not simply pass after such a long time is deeply human. Tears are not a weakness, but an expression of this love, which continues to exist even though the loved one is missing.
Many people experience that the loss throws them completely off track, especially when everything in everyday life reminds of the loved one. It often takes a lot of time, sometimes accompaniment and loving patience with yourself, to slowly find ground under your feet again.
If you wish, you can contact us directly once. Sometimes a conversation can help sort out the pain a bit or find new ways of dealing.
I sincerely wish you strength, people by your side and small moments in which you feel: your love remains, even if life changes.
With warm greetings
Bo Hauer