The Rain Came After the Funeral: Grieving the Parent Who Hurt You—And Forgiving the Child You Were

Grief isn’t always clean.

Some people cry at funerals. Others stand still, arms crossed, heart numb. Some weep for what was lost. Others ache for what was never there.

This is the story of Devon—a man who didn’t shed a single tear when they lowered his mother’s casket into the ground.

Because he wasn’t grieving her death.
He was grieving something far more complicated:
The childhood he never got.

If you’ve ever buried a parent who left you with more scars than smiles, this story is for you.

This is the story of Devon—a man who didn’t shed a single tear when they lowered his mother’s casket into the ground.
This is the story of Devon – a man who didn’t shed a single tear when they lowered his mother’s casket into the ground.

What No One Talks About: Grieving an Abuser

When Devon was ten years old, he brought home a drawing from school.
It was a house with a garden. A sun. Two smiling people.
He gave it to his mom. She barely glanced at it before snapping,

“You call this art? It looks like trash.”

He stopped drawing after that.

His mother didn’t hit often.
But her words sliced deeper than any bruise.
And what made it harder was this:

Everyone else thought she was lovely.

Polite in public.
Helpful at church.
Always “tired from working so hard.”

But at home, Devon was “too sensitive.”
“Too dramatic.”
“Too much.”

So he learned to shrink himself.

And that version of him—the one who held his breath every time she entered the room—was the one who stood at her funeral, dry-eyed, feeling… nothing.

The Lie Children of Trauma Carry

Children are wired to love their parents, no matter what.
And when love isn’t returned in a healthy way, the child doesn’t stop loving.
They stop trusting themselves.

Devon believed:

  • “If I was better, she’d love me.”
  • “If I didn’t make mistakes, she’d hug me.”
  • “If I just stayed quiet, maybe this time would be different.”

This lie followed him into adulthood.

It showed up in his relationships—apologizing for asking for affection.
It lived in his work ethic—driven by the need to “earn” being seen.
And it buried his grief so deeply that even when his mother died, he felt guilt for not missing her more.

Because how do you mourn someone who never really saw you?

After the Funeral, the Grief Finally Came

The funeral was quiet.
A few neighbors. Some coworkers.
People saying things like:

“She was a strong woman.”
“She loved her kids.”
“She did her best.”

Devon didn’t argue.
But inside, something cracked.

Because love had never felt like love.
It felt like fear.
It felt like walking on eggshells.
It felt like praise that came only when he was invisible.

That night, it rained.

Devon sat on a park bench, watching water pool around his shoes.

He was 29 years old and had spent his entire life waiting for something that never came:
His mother’s approval.

And now, with her gone, the realization hit:

“She’s not coming back.
And neither is the love I kept hoping for.”

That’s when the tears came.

Not for her.
But for him.

Mourning the Childhood That Was Stolen

We often associate grief with death.

But for many survivors of emotional abuse, the deepest grief is for a life never lived:

  • The hugs that never happened
  • The birthdays no one remembered
  • The comfort that never came after nightmares
  • The words: “I’m proud of you,” that were never spoken

Devon wept for the boy who brought home A’s and only got silence.
The boy who stayed in his room while the house buzzed with anger.
The boy who never felt safe to cry—until now.

That’s grief too.
And it’s valid.

Forgiving Yourself for Surviving

Devon spent years blaming himself.

For not standing up to her.
For always seeking her approval.
For still feeling conflicted after her death.

But trauma doesn’t make room for logic.
It conditions you.

You become who you need to be to survive.

And that version of you—the silent one, the overachiever, the people-pleaser—deserves compassion, not shame.

That night, Devon whispered:

“I forgive you for believing it was your fault.
You were just trying to survive.”

And for the first time, he didn’t feel like a lost child.
He felt like a man—choosing himself.

When the Parent Is Gone But the Pain Remains

Devon didn’t wake up the next day healed.
There were still dreams. Still guilt. Still that voice in his head saying, “Be better.”

But now he had new words to offer back:

“I am enough.
I was always enough.
I just needed someone to say it.”

And so, he began the long, quiet work of healing:

  • Writing letters he’d never send
  • Talking to his younger self in the mirror
  • Setting boundaries in relationships that echoed his mother’s patterns
  • Creating a new definition of love—one that included softness, patience, and listening

5 Steps for Healing After Losing a Hurtful Parent

💔 1. Allow Complicated Grief

It’s okay to not feel sad—or to feel sad about the wrong things.
Your experience is valid, even if others don’t understand.

🧠 2. Separate the Facts from the Fantasy

Make a list of what actually happened—versus the version you’ve been telling to protect others (or yourself).

💬 3. Say the Words You Needed to Hear

You don’t need their permission.
You can speak your truth now.

“You were never too much.”
“You were worthy of love.”
“You didn’t have to earn it.”

🫂 4. Seek Safe Support

Not everyone can hold space for this kind of grief.
Find a therapist, a group, or even one friend who says, “I believe you.”

✍️ 5. Write a New Ending

What kind of parent would you be to yourself?
How do you show up now, even when no one else claps?

Conclusion: Let the Rain Come

The rain after the funeral didn’t ruin anything.
It softened the ground.
It made space for something new to grow.

Devon stood in the rain and said goodbye.

Not to his mother.
But to the version of himself who had been waiting at a locked door his whole life.

He turned away.
Not in bitterness.
But in freedom.

💬 Let’s Talk

Have you ever grieved someone not for who they were—but for who they never were?

Have you had to forgive yourself just for surviving? Or share it with someone who needs to know:

“You were always worth loving.
Even if they never did.”

What They Did Wasn’t Your Fault – And It Never Was

Keyword focus: self-blame childhood trauma, forgiving yourself for the past

What They Did Wasn’t Your Fault—And It Never Was

Some wounds don’t scream. They whisper.

They whisper that maybe it was you. That you should have been quieter. Smarter. Better behaved. More lovable. They whisper until the echo becomes a belief: It happened because of me.

Let me say this with all the clarity an old soul can muster:

What they did to you was not your fault. And it never was.

The Lie Children Tell Themselves

When something terrible happens to a child, the world becomes unsafe—and children, eager to make sense of chaos, often come to the same heartbreaking conclusion: “It must be me.”

Why? Because it’s safer to believe you were the problem than to believe the people who were supposed to love you didn’t.

This belief becomes a scar deep in the psyche. And long after the bruises fade, the shame remains. It leaks into relationships, career choices, the way we talk to ourselves in the quiet moments.

Guilt and Shame: The Silent Twins

Guilt says, “I did something bad.” Shame says, “I am something bad.”

Many survivors of childhood trauma carry both.

They feel guilty for being “difficult children.” They feel shame for needing, for crying, for surviving. For being the ones who walked away but never quite felt free.

But here’s the truth: children cannot cause abuse. They cannot provoke neglect. They cannot deserve abandonment.

They can only react to what they are given. And no matter how they reacted, it was not a justification for mistreatment.

The Power of Rewriting the Story

You don’t get to rewrite the past, but you do get to rewrite what you believe about it.

You get to say:

  • “I was a child.”
  • “I didn’t cause this.”
  • “They were wrong.”
  • “I still matter.”

And yes, sometimes that truth is met with resistance. The part of you that still clings to self-blame might push back. That’s okay. You’re unlearning something you were taught in survival mode.

Forgiving the Child You Were

This isn’t about forgiving abusers. This is about forgiving yourself.

Forgive yourself for:

  • The ways you coped.
  • The things you didn’t understand.
  • The silence you kept.
  • The times you lashed out or shut down.

You did the best you could. And that child you were? They were brave in ways no one ever recognized.

You survived.

Healing Starts With the Truth

And the truth is this: you were innocent. You were worthy of love. And you still are.

The moment you stop blaming yourself is the moment you take your power back.

So today, when that old voice starts whispering again—tell it gently but firmly:

“I know better now. That was never my fault.”