My wife passed away after 36 years of marriage, due to kidney failure and a heart attack. I absolutely know she is with the Lord in heaven, but still the grief comes and goes, however the duration of the tears is less now after two weeks. She passed away unexpectedly on 11-2-15. Those who have been down this path before, please encourage me that there will be a time coming when the grief will be replaced with cherished memories.
My friend, I stand with you. You have not yet begun to grieve. Grief is almost the measure of how embedded the person was in your life and makeup. There are some lessons people have learnt from similar experiences.
1. You have to let the pain and loss flow, without restraint. You need to let yourself know and express how much this person meant to you.
2. You have to let go. Accepting the loss is the hardest thing we can experience. It is like letting part of us die.
This process takes 10 years+. It is not about being normal, it is about becoming somebody different, without the other in your life. It is very hard, but it is also very important to let it happen.
In an odd way, letting yourself go through this process, means you more quickly find yourself at the end.
Part of the process is almost a conversation with yourself where you acknowledge all they meant to you and how much you miss them.
In our church we have started a counselling group on grieving, because many are suprised at how different and apparently out of control they have become. But this is all normal.
I went down this path after losing my dad aged 23, and was suprised how much it all meant to me. In someways you learn how interwoven you are in your hearts when this process begins, but also how alive you are also.
I guess this is not what you want to here, but know Jesus said this,
"Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted."