Can you hear that? It’s the sound of me walking on eggshells.
What I’m about to say might not go down so well with a few people. Or a lot of people but I’m going to say it anyway.
Here’s the thing: I don’t want to read anymore of those lists telling me what not to say to people.
I’m done.
Every time I go online there’s a headline.
What not to say to single mothers.
What not to say to newlyweds.
What not to say to parents of twins.
What not to say to parents with one child.
What not to say to someone who’s just had a miscarriage.
What not to say stay at home mothers.
And on and on and on and ON it goes.
Enough. Enough with the lists telling me the three million things I cannot say.
Pretty soon nobody is going to say anything to anybody out of fear of offending them. Is that what we want?
When this woman speaks about love and loss, we listen.
Don’t get me wrong. I know there has been value in these lists. I know, believe me I KNOW that people can say thoughtless things. And I know that by writing these lists it gives a person who is facing a difficult or unusual situation the chance to draw a line in the sand and create a few boundaries. It also provides a helpful resource to family and friends around that person to understand why it’s not okay to say to someone with cancer, “Just think positive” or to a mother whose baby has been stillborn, “It was natural selection” (yes, somebody did actually say that to me).