lifestyle

How someone mourns is not up to me, you, or social media to decide.

 

What a week.

First David Bowie died, then Alan Rickman. Both giants of the arts, both 69, both quietly battling cancer.

At times it’s seemed like the whole world is in mourning; collectively, frenetically sad.

It’s easy to seek solace in mass grief in a time when the outpouring of strangers is only a click away. But the anonymity of the internet also makes it easy to lash out when we see people behaving in ways that we don’t like, grieving in ways that we wouldn’t.

There’s been a fair bit of that this week, and it has made me very uncomfortable.

I am so very lucky. Few people I know really well have died. The ones who have were mostly all very old, having lived long and rich lives.

I don’t know how I would react if I lost a parent, my brother, a close friend, a dear cousin. I don’t really even want to think about it.

But I do know one thing. My grief would be my own, and how I chose to display it would be up to me.

There is no right way to grieve.

So what if the vast majority of mourners didn’t know the deceased personally? Why does that matter? Someone can be a significant figure in your life, without ever really being present. Losing the people who inspire us, encourage us and reassure us can be shocking and sad. And those emotions are real.

In some ways it seems incredible to me that anyone would think it’s OK to admonish someone for their response to a friend or family member’s death. Or that anyone thinks it’s useful to get on Twitter and complain at mass public outpourings of grief.

But that’s what has happened this week.

There are two very visible examples. One is Angie Bowie.

Estranged from ex-husband David Bowie for thirty-odd years and ensconced in the Celebrity Big Brother house, after being told of Bowie’s death Angie made the decision to stay where she was.

She also chose to share her feelings with the world through the Big Brother diary room.

Let’s be clear. These were her choices. No one forced her to do those things. Angie Bowie made a decision based on her own feelings. We don’t get to choose what those feelings are, and we can’t possibly know what passed between her and Bowie all those years ago.

If you sat around watching her reaction, or read about it in the press and then tweeted about how disgusted you were, you are part of the reason that TV was made in the first place. Your high horse does not absolve you.

On hearing of Alan Rickman’s death Harry Potter co-star Emma Watson posted a picture of him with a quote of his about feminism.

“There is nothing wrong with a man being a feminist, I think it is to our mutual advantage,” the quote read.

People did not want to hear it.

Emma Watson met Rickman when she was a small child. She grew up working alongside him, and going by what Daniel Radcliffe said in his tribute to Rickman, he was a huge supporter of his child co-stars, and an important mentor.

Alan Rickman’s greatest screen moments:

Rickman was also a political person. We know that. We don’t know what he and Watson might have talked about when they got together. We don’t know anything more than what Watson shared.

Which is something he said that she obviously took to heart and is part of how she will remember him.

Who are we to judge?

There is no way to gauge the impact of someone’s death on someone else. To try and put limits around what grief is and how we feel it is incredibly unfair, and completely pointless.

You cannot make someone feel as you do. As artists, both David Bowie and Alan Rickman produced work that was joyful, challenging and unique. What I love about them will not be the same as what someone else does.

How I process their absence will not match what you do (or don’t) do.

But just because you don’t agree with someone’s response, doesn’t mean it’s wrong.

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Top Comments

Sheena 8 years ago

That quote of Alan Rickman's about "mutual advantage" is from an interview he did as last year as part of the ABC's "One To One" series. Or at least, I certainly heard it when they replayed that interview this weekend.

One thing baffles me about the public (i.e. people-who-didn't-know-them) mourning, though. What's with all the young people mourning Bowie? He has lead a very quiet life for years, for most of the time these people have been alive. How do they know they his work - was there a resurgence of interest with those two TV series named after songs of his, Life On Mars and Ashes To Ashes?

Megan 8 years ago

An artist doesn't have to be contemporary to touch someone. What about the writers of classic literature? People today are still touched by Shakespeare, Jane Austin, Ernest Hemmingway...

Vickie Kenny 8 years ago

Does it matter??

Siobhan Sands 8 years ago

You're forgetting the parents. My Dad absolutely adores him and so I grew up with Bowie through my Dad it will be the same for many others. But for those that didn't have the benefit of a musically enriched upbringing. They are quite capable of finding out who artists are on their own, through his movies as well as his music. It baffles me when people think the generation who grew up with him are the only ones that could possibly know who he is and appreciate him.

Helen 8 years ago

My kids are 12 and 16 and they know plenty of Bowie songs because my husband and I love him and have played his music in the car since they were babies. You could also say the same about my husband and I really - we were quite young in the 70s when Bowie was huge, but we were influenced by our older siblings and cousins in the music we were exposed to and grew to love.


Carla Louise 8 years ago

This whole attacking Emma Watson thing is just plain ridiculous. Seriously. It's pathetic. If you're going to hate someone because YOU don't understand feminism, go right ahead. It just kind of proves why feminism is needed if you're that much of an idiot: https://themelodramaticconf...

Snorks 8 years ago

It's got nothing to do with understanding Feminism, it's got to do with her using the death of a friend to further her cause.

Elijem 8 years ago

I think that's an untrue characterization. She posted a bunch of quite brilliant quotes he made on a range of topics. I think she wanted to show the world what an exceptional and enlightened human being he was, and the reason we should all admire him, not just for his work but the ethics with which he lived his life. As for "her" cause - the very heart of feminism is the desire to ensure half of the population on this planet has the same rights and opportunities as the other. It's my cause, and the cause of millions. Apparently it was Rickman's cause, too. Smart guy.

Snorks 8 years ago

Yes, you're right, well said.
I did mean to put 'People are saying....' at the beginning of that but I will cop that on the chin. It was more of an answer to Carla Louise who seemed to think people's comments were an attack because people don't understand feminism.
I could argue with you that feminism is about getting the same or better rights than the other half of the population, which is one area where they run into issues with men.

Vickie Kenny 8 years ago

How do you know this Snorks?? This is a huge jump...