prism_tail_rainbows wrote:
and i feel worse about the fact that i DON'T feel that bad about it. i feel like i should be distraught since she was relatively close to the family, and i feel sort of bad, but i don't feel as bad as i should. is this because of my lack of empathy because of AS? has anyone been in this situation?
Don't feel
as bad as you should? Just how bad
should YOU feel? Not everyone becomes distraught over a loss like that, especially when the deceased is someone who's had a full life and lived to a ripe old age, or perhaps has been irrecoverably ill, in which case its sometimes considered a bit of a relief for both the victim of illness and the family.
Everybody copes with these losses differently. Sometimes they don't really begin to sink in until some time later. I have a hard time allowing myself to feel the grief of that sort of loss in the moment, because everyone around me is so sad and upset and I feel like I need to keep it together for their sakes, so
someone can offer a dry shoulder to cry on.
Sometimes, much later (sometimes months or years) when I'm alone and doing something completely innocuous and unrelated, a memory of the passed will come to me in a particularly sentimental moment and it will touch me very deeply and I find myself missing and weeping for someone I hadn't thought about for ages.
You are who you are. Don't feel guilty for that. If you don't feel particularly grief stricken at the moment, just be supportive of those who are. That's all your Grandmother would expect of you.