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In the months since his death, I've grieved for someone I never really understood, missed someone I very rarely saw.
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How do you grieve for someone you've lost but who is still there?
https://t.co/jgdHBogDZl pic.twitter.com/zR9dPlbcTt "Do we have the 'right' to grieve for someone we don't even know?" writes Glenn.
Since then, the waters around us seem so wide and deep, especially because we are grieving for someone who died, in the end, by his own hand.
They are grieving for someone they love very much, but my thoughts at this time are also with survivors of alleged abuse, many of whom were denied the opportunity to see justice take its course.
There is barely a family in this country who wasn't touched by the "American War", and that doesn't still grieve for someone who was lost in the conflict.
1. Don't grieve for someone while they are still alive.
I cursed myself for having never seen him live, felt thankful for even existing within the same tiny blip on the universal timeline as him, and grieved for the loss of someone so beyond description that language suddenly feels like a dumb and unequipped device.
"Before the revolution, villages grieved for a month [if they lost someone].
I grieved for this horrible cancer happening to someone who did not deserve it, if that is ever a criterion.
I grieved for the wasted resources.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com