And then it dies. Or we have to kill it. Or the winter comes.
You realize that the forbidden flower was not a mistake. It was a mirror . Losing A Forbidden Flower
This is the grief of the unacknowledged. It is grief without a grave. As author C.S. Lewis wrote after losing his wife, "No one ever told me that grief felt so like fear." But at least Lewis could write a book about it. When your grief is tied to a forbidden flower, writing the book would ruin your life. Because traditional grief models (Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance) assume a sanctioned loss, the forbidden flower requires its own taxonomy. Stage 1: The Re-Living (Nostalgia as Self-Harm) In the first weeks and months, your mind becomes a projector playing a highlight reel. You do not remember the anxiety of hiding. You do not remember the panic of almost getting caught. You remember the nectar . And then it dies
So mourn the flower. Press it into the dictionary of your soul. And then—slowly, imperfectly, with trembling hands—turn back toward the sun. The allowed garden is still there. It is not as thrilling. But it is real. And real is the only place where healing ever grows. If you are struggling with the isolation of losing a forbidden relationship, consider speaking with a therapist who specializes in disenfranchised grief. You do not have to confess the details to heal the wound. You realize that the forbidden flower was not a mistake
Consider the queer person raised in a fundamentalist home. They lose the teenage love they never got to have. The flower here is authenticity. Consider the artist who became a lawyer to please their parents. They lose the painting they never finished. Consider the woman who wanted to be child-free but succumbed to societal pressure. She loses the quiet mornings she will never know.
In this stage, you gaslight yourself. "Maybe it wasn't forbidden. Maybe we could have made it work." You obsess over the "what ifs" as if you are solving a math problem. What if you had left your spouse a year earlier? What if you had met in another lifetime?