If you look inside and acquire a deeper understanding of Hashem’s plan you won’t need to cry

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Paying a shivah call is never easy. It doesn’t matter the circumstances, the age of the deceased, whether or not the death was anticipated. Those questions simply don’t matter (and, frankly, should never be asked). When walking into a shivah house, you never know what you’re going to find, and if you’ll be able to provide some comfort — the point of your visit.
My neighbor was sitting shivah for her mother, who had succumbed to a fast-acting cancer. Her mother had lived in the States, but the kevurah had been here in Eretz Yisrael, and I knew her siblings were sitting with her in her house.
The house was relatively full. Pulling up a chair near my friend, I listened as she retold stories and memories of her mom, sometimes with a sob, other times just reminiscing, as she struggled to find comfort in the retelling. Sitting next to her in a semi-circle were several women, whose strong resemblance to my friend made it clear that they were relatives, come to be menachem avel. They too added to the anecdotes, both with tears and nostalgic longing.
I listened for a while. It’s rare that I walk out of a shivah house without chizuk, both from the actions of the niftar as well as the actions of those who are mourning her. Here, too, I was captivated by the many stories, and the dignity with which they were retold.
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