orek
Senior Member
Posts: 302
Threads: 12
Joined: Jun 2012
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RE: Hard to be the one on the sidelines.
That is hard to say. Any one of those things alone does not put up a red flag for me. For instance, my very normal, functional, sane cousin truly believes that after my sister died (this cousin is close enough to the family to be more like an honorary sister than a cousin, so my sister's death hit her hard, too), my sister somehow sent her a heart image on her printer. I guess it came out randomly; she had no explanation for why that image was coming through on her printer; and she felt in her gut it was a "message" from my sister. That kind of thing is common. So if your friend felt her mom's "ghost" hug and that brought her some sense of resolution and of carrying her mom with her, then that might be her mind's way of making peace so she can deal with it and NOT crack.
The Buddhist stuff I can relate to, also. Even though I don't consider myself Buddhist and no longer identify as a Christian, reading books on Buddhist thought and meditation has been helping me immensely with learning to be in the "now" and with helping to reset my nervous system from its chronic emergency mode status. I can see how the Buddhist teachings might help your friend let go of all the things she has no control of in her life, which obviously is plenty! Yipes, poor woman.
But ultimately, I don't know from afar. You know your friend and are picking up on some danger signs. That's what matters. And what matters to me more is how troubling and triggering it is for you. Maybe you can do your own version of wishing her healing--prayers, sending positive energy, lighting a candle, whatever your own preferred belief system feels comfortable with--and be sure to allow yourself to "let go" when you do since you are not in the position to speak into the situation.
Take care. Your friend is lucky to have someone like you notice and care.
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01-23-2015, 02:10 PM |
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