“The function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.” — Jack London
Grief often makes each day feel endless. Many grieving parents feel trapped between surviving and surrendering. The death of a child changes time itself. Hours stretch painfully, yet weeks disappear in a haze. Many parents wake, breathe, and exist—but do not feel alive. Simply getting dressed can feel like a task too large. But somewhere inside the sorrow, a whisper remains. Life still offers meaning, even when joy feels impossible. Living fully after loss is not a betrayal. Living fully can become the way we honor the one we lost.
A grieving parent may feel guilt for laughing, resting, or smiling. Joy can feel like forgetting. Many parents fight to justify their moments of peace. But peace does not erase love. Peace is not disrespectful to grief. A life lived deeply becomes a tribute to the child who cannot live theirs. We carry them forward in the choices we make. Choosing to live with intention does not mean moving on. Choosing to live with intention means living with their memory at the center.
Grief narrows the focus to survival. With time, surviving can transform into living again. That shift often comes slowly. One deep breath becomes one short walk. One small act of purpose becomes one meaningful connection. Time itself becomes more sacred. Moments matter more. A grieving parent who begins to live again does not forget. A grieving parent who begins to live again remembers differently. Grief remains, but so does the will to use what time remains well.
Thought for today: Choose one moment to live instead of just survive. Let that moment carry the love you still hold.