01/20/2023
Anyone who's lost a loved one would give anything to be able to hear their voice again, and while a new wind phone in Deer Lake, NL won't enable them to have a two-way conversation, it is helping to bring comfort to grieving people. The "wind phone" is a concept developed in Japan; essentially it's an unconnected phone located in nature, giving people an opportunity to feel they can talk to their loved ones who've died. And it is helping.
When Natasha Lavers lost her father to su***de four years ago, she honoured his wish to be cremated and not have a gravesite or headstone. But Lavers said that left her missing somewhere to go to honour her father's memory and to give voice to her thoughts and feelings. She said the wind phone has provided just such a place for her.
"You always feel like your loved ones are listening, but it's just the physical part of putting a receiver up to your ear, and having a conversation with your loved one, even though it's just a one-sided conversation, that's so powerful," she said.
The wind phone in Deer Lake is a vintage rotary dial phone mounted on a wooden housing. It's a project of the town council's new health and wellness committee, chaired by deputy mayor and family physician Melanie Young. Young said she liked the idea of a wind phone because it's simple and inexpensive, at a total cost to the town of about $80, but it presents grieving people a chance to work through their sense of loss.
"The phone itself acts as a symbolic intermediary. It allows people who are grieving the opportunity to externalize their grief," said Young. "For those of us that often help people along the grieving process, we know that externalizing grief can often be very powerful in healing." It's common for people to grieve long after an initial mourning period, said Young, and private grief can be very isolating. "The world moves on and sometimes people feel like their world is shattered, and they are left in inner isolation in dealing with their grief," said Young.
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