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Should you shield the canyons from the windstorms you would never see the true beauty of their carvings.
― Elisabeth Kübler-Ross
On a beautiful spring day a few weeks ago, I went to the nearby Glasgow Arboretum. I sat on a bench, started reading Leaning Into Love, and promptly started bawling my eyes out. The story is just that beautiful and heartbreaking and hopeful, and the tears are for all those emotions. (You might want to read it someplace that’s a bit more private though.)
Blurb

- Title: Leaning Into Love: a Spiritual Journey Through Grief
- Author: Elaine Mansfield
- Genre: Memoir
- Publisher: Larson Publications
- Date of Publication: October 3, 2014
- Number of pages: appr. 176
REVIEW: 5 out of 5 stars
“Did you ever think about getting married again?” I asked my friend, a widow in her eighties who had lost her husband thirty years earlier.
“We were so young when we got married,” she told me. “We grew up together, raised our children, worked together, and learned from each other.” Then she said something I’ve never forgotten. “When my cat dies, I might want to replace him. But when my mother died, I didn’t look for a new mother. And when my husband died, I didn’t need a new one of those either.”

Elaine Mansfield writes about love and grief from a spiritual perspective that reflects over forty years as a student of philosophy, Buddhism, Jungian psychology, mythology, and meditation. Elaine facilitates workshops and hospice bereavement groups in the Finger Lakes region of New York.
I thought about her words when I lost both parents two years ago. And I remembered them again as I read Leaning Into Love, Elaine Mansfield’s luminous memoir about her husband’s final illness and her own journey through grief. Through her, we meet the indomitable Vic—“lover, husband, spiritual partner, and best friend”. Their life together was one of both spiritual discovery and day-to-day companionship. Elaine is like the best friend who invites you to be part of her special circle of strength and support as she tells us about Vic’s diagnosis and describes the warrior battling his rare form of cancer.
Whether or not you accept the five stage model of grief described by Swiss psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross in her 1969 book, On Death and Dying—denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance—it’s clear that each of these states played a part in Elaine and Vic’s journey. But what makes this more than just another case study are the personal details of their lives together. Despite the decades of shared experiences, they remain distinct personalities who complement as well as reflect each other. Elaine is the nurturer, both by nature and profession (nutritionist). She willingly gave up graduate school and an academic career to support Vic and raise their family. It’s Vic who secretly loves being the center of attention, in personal and public life. Ironically, those inclinations become reality as Elaine cares for Vic, while his illness becomes the focus of all attention.
What did I love about this book? I love that we get to know both Elaine and Vic as three-dimensional people with an incredible capacity for love and sacrifice, but with all-too-humanly endearing flaws and idiosyncrasies. They get tired, frustrated, depressed, discouraged. They are forced to rely on each other and on family and friends. Despite the fact that they’re told from the beginning that Vic’s disease is terminal, they pin hopes on each treatment. Vic is the warrior who doesn’t want to give up the fight, but it is Elaine who must step forward and do battle with the medical establishment on his behalf.
I loved the symbolism of Vic’s tractor, so necessary to keep their woods and paths accessible, but a terrifying monster Elaine has never mastered. Her equal parts determination and despair as she realizes the magnitude of the task that now falls to her are funny and human and inspiring.
I loved the spiritual side of their life together, the importance they assign to ritual, the way their personal beliefs carry through to everything they do. But I also loved the physical side, the need to touch and make love and connect even through the devastation of Vic’s illness. And I love that when they fail—when things don’t work, or when their world comes crashing down—not only do they not punish themselves for falling too, but they add a measure of self-deprecation to their despair. “Stuck in grief and martyrdom, I am a devotee of Our Lady of Perpetual Dissatisfaction.”
I love the way Elaine gives herself permission to “live” in the Green Man’s house for a year, nurturing her grief and slowly, carefully internalizing the spirit of Vic and of their love. And most of all, I love that Elaine emerges from her grief and sorrow not by “getting over” the loss of Vic, but by internalizing his spirit and their love as a source of strength and support.
Vic’s death taught me that only kindness and love matter in the end. When we fall, and we will all fall, we can rise up if we lean into each other and the sacred gift of life.
Not only would I give this book five stars out of five, but I would also give it to anyone who is facing a loss. Elaine gives herself—and her readers—permission to embrace grief, to see it as another facet of love, and to turn that love into a support so strong, you can lean into it. You may not need this book right now, but I urge you to buy it anyway. Have it. Know you can reach for it when that inevitable need arises. You’ll be grateful to Elaine and Vic for what they have to teach about leaning into love.
**I received this book for free from the publisher or author in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.**
CONTACT AND BUY LINKS:
website | Amazon US | Amazon UK | Twitter: @ElaineMansfiel7
Excerpt: see Pg 69 Challenge excerpt from Leaning Into Love here
Elaine’s TEDx talk, “Good Grief! What I Learned from Loss”
A wonderful book. So glad you read it Barb and got to see why I loved it so much too. Elaine is lovely and a very inspirational lady. Fantastic review on a book which touched my heart.
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I usually run screaming from anything sentimental or self-help. But this was just so perfectly done…funny and touching and not at all schmaltzy. I really feel like I should just buy at least a dozen copies to send to people. (And I don’t even feel that way about my own books!)
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Thank you, Barb. I’m honored. I read your review for the first time and I’m weeping. It’s a wonderful thing to feel seen, including my shadow side. I miss my old life every day, but I’m a new person with a new focus. Part of me, a sorrowful part, knows that good things happened because Vic died and I had to re-create myself.
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Hello Ali. Thanks so much for your kindness and encouragement. Like everyone else, I feel like a jerk fairly often, but there are those parts that rise to the occasion. Both Vic and I did that during his illness.
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What a lovely review, as you say it’s a book that so many people could gain strength from at a time of deep need.
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I’m not nearly as spiritual a person as Elaine, but I just loved the way she took inspiration from so many sources–friends, teachers, the Dalai Lama, and even ancient sources like the Green Man. She has a way of going to the heart of each thing instead of focusing on the trappings.
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I agree, Rosie. It’s a lovely review.
Barb, I’m a hybrid mix when it comes to spirituality. I’ve been lucky to meet teachers in many traditions and feel they all had something to teach me. When we’re backed up against the wall, we pull out all the resources we’ve developed in a life–and then look for more.
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I’ve been meaning to buy this for ages. Lovely review Barb – off to Amazon right now 🙂
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That’s great, Alison! Please let me know what you think of it.
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Thank you, Alison. Makes me happy to hear that.
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Such a glowing review. It is tough subject matter, but one we all must face.
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What I particularly loved about this book is that Elaine doesn’t try to tell anyone what to do. She’s just showing us what worked for her.
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You may have had some tough feelings to navigate, but sounds like you were conscious of what was underneath. In my world, Vic’s mom had the hardest time accepting the new situation.
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In her mid-80s, my mother said that it was almost impossible to make big changes in her thinking, whether it was to try new foods, a new church, or a new idea. And I can’t think of anything that would be a bigger, more wrong-feeling change than accepting that your son or daughter has died before you. My heart really went out to Vic’s mother.
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I agree. I can’t imagine having a child die. We had a few rocky years because she had to blame someone for his death and her choice not to see him at the end. I was it! We didn’t exactly work it through, but I persisted and didn’t abandon her while she grew so old she didn’t have the energy to be angry. I still oversee her care in her own apartment with help of health aids. I’ll hold her hand until the end and now she trusts that.
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There’s no doubt I’m glowing from Barb’s review. Yes, we all have to face this, sometimes much earlier than we think. My husband and I never imagined we’d have to go through such an experience. We’ve become expert at pushing death and loss under the table.
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In my family, we were almost smug about how well we handled losing both parents so close together. We’d heard about other families who fought or fell apart. But alas for hubris… when it came time to sell the house, it turned out so much emotion and memories were invested there that we ended up with deep differences of opinion.
I was amazed that there was SO much feeling involved, until one sister pointed out that it was really an expression of the grief that we all thought we had “handled”.
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Reblogged this on Royal Graffiti.
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Wow! Two reblogs in one day. That’s a personal record, and one I really want to thank you for.
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I’m glad to be part of your reblogging success, Barb.
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Everyone liked the Irish article. I will be reblog a lot if you don’t mind. .
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