Nora McInerny: We don't "move on" from grief. We move forward with it
Nora McInerny makes a living talking to people about life's hardest moments. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
my husband Aaron died
with stage-four glioblastoma,
for brain cancer.
about this period of my life,
it's going to happen to you.
in this specific order or at this speed,
that I have seen will stun you:
a 100 percent chance of dying.
to talk about death and loss,
because it's pretty easy to recap,
that other people have experienced.
and I wish I made more money, but ...
I started a little nonprofit.
with the uncomfortable,
especially if it's someone else's grief.
that I started with my friend Moe,
your husband, wife, girlfriend, boyfriend,
are just going to look around
of friends of friends
who's gone through something similar,
towards each other
and not get your sad on other people.
married, partnered,
aren't ready or willing to hear yet.
about sex, is that normal?"
of the Property Brothers?"
and I see old people holding hands,
been together for decades,
through together,
over who should take out the trash ...
that we have in the group
the world that is grief-adjacent
of unscientific studies,
The Hot Young Widows Club
when your person died?" They did.
people said to you?"
people say a lot of things,
a very handsome man named Matthew,
in our blended family,
of Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
and I don't even touch them.
I've never once said it that way.
anyone else say it that way.
language is trash, so ...
who, like, speaks it
that makes sense -- good job.
really good, but I haven't "moved on."
and I hate that phrase so much,
and love are just moments
and that I probably should.
I slip so easily into the present tense,
that made we weird.
or because we're forgetful,
we love, who we've lost,
that he was before,
people try to tell me that he would be.
who share none of his DNA,
because I had Aaron
that Matthew wanted to marry.
in his favorite river in Minnesota,
you fit into a plastic bag --
stuck to my fingers.
in the water and rinsed them,
than I had already lost,
that he would always be a part of me.
fill himself with poison for three years,
a little bit longer with you,
person he was the night you met
who isn't even two years old yet,
on the last day of his life,
in a few hours,
finally, like really fall in love
I've been wrong this entire time.
or a reality show -- it's so quiet,
that connects the two of us
even when he's gone."
freezing and he's so warm,
and shove them up his shirt ...
I laid in bed with Aaron
if my hands were cold,
I would ever do that.
is always going to be sad.
and I'm just a hologram.
is always going to make me laugh.
with all of these other emotions.
among the people who love me,
we can all go home.
is so appealing even to me,
I had gotten that, too, but I didn't.
I love you, honey --
it was like an alternate universe,
own adventure" books from the '80s
"Would you like to think about Aaron?
just get in there," and I did.
those two plots were unfurling at once,
really helped me realize the enormity
that my love for Aaron
are not opposing forces.
they were like ... frankly.
all around the world,
and traumatic losses every day.
that's ever happened to them.
of someone they love,
years ago, even decades ago.
around this loss
have kept spinning.
a total stranger,
just as much as the joyful ones.
at the people around us
and tell them to "move on," do we?
"Congratulations on your beautiful baby,"
"Another birthday party? Get over it."
or watching "The Wire" on HBO,
until you get it, until you do it.
once it's your love or your baby,
and your front row at the funeral,
is not a moment in time,
by something chronic.
grief feels like it could be.
to remind one another
you'll be grieving, and able to love
is going to laugh again and smile again.
they'll even find love again.
they're going to move forward.
that they've moved on.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Nora McInerny - Author, podcast hostNora McInerny makes a living talking to people about life's hardest moments.
Why you should listen
Nora McInerny speaks from experience and empathy, having lost her second baby, her father and her husband over the course of six weeks at age 31. She is the best-selling author of the memoir It’s Okay To Laugh, Crying Is Cool Too, the host of the award-winning podcast "Terrible, Thanks for Asking" and the founder of the nonprofit Still Kickin. She contributes words to Elle, Cosmopolitan, Buzzfeed, Time, Slate and Vox, where she's often tapped for her essays highlighting the emotional landscape and humor in complex topics, like the financial impacts of healthcare and grief in a digital age.
McInerny is a master storyteller known for her dedication to bringing heart and levity to the difficult and uncomfortable conversations most of us try to avoid, and also for being very tall. She was voted "Most Humorous" by the Annunciation Catholic School Class of 1998.
Nora McInerny | Speaker | TED.com