Booklet Grief and Healing
Booklet Grief and Healing
Booklet Grief and Healing
Table of Contents
In a July 1996 Time magazine article titled Rage Makes Me Strong, Susan Cohen,
who lost her daughter in the terrorist bombing of Pam Am Flight 103, said:
Loss changes our lives. We may feel drawn deep into a vortex--disoriented, unable
to find our way, and believing that things will never be “normal” again.
The difference between bland, neutral words and healing begins with
understanding that grief is not just an emotion. We experience grief physically and
mentally after we experience a painful loss or a traumatic event. We can
experience grief down to our soul--we can naturally question our spiritual beliefs.
Each of us experiences grief differently—even though we may experience the
same loss.
─ Ending a relationship
─ Losing a job
─ Illness or disease (impacting you or someone you care about)
─ Assault
─ Accident
─ A painful or traumatic event
Grief is a natural journey that takes time and work to travel. Grief is not “one size
fits all” and it is normal for people to grieve in different ways. There is no "right”
way to grieve. The loss of a child, spouse, younger parent, life partner, or best
friend, is usually more deeply felt than the loss of more distant relations and
acquaintances. These relationships are more deeply interwoven into our sense of
self. It is completely normal to “unravel” if these relationships are lost.
Shock or Denial. It is normal for a grieving person to forget that a loved one is
gone — until a startling reminder brings back the painful reality. A grieving person
can feel air-headed or numb, and may experience frequent emotional shifts, from
remorse, guilt, sadness, and regret. These emotions can be accompanied by deep
sadness, crying, sobbing, or complete stillness.
Protest. Emotions can range from helplessness to anger. A person can also
experience an increased affect, which is just a technical way to talk about an
increase in emotions and emotional expression. A person’s normal reaction to an
event can be “blown out of proportion” when the person is grieving.
A person will notice that they have the ability to feel joy again, to look forward to
the future, to connect with others, and to re-engage in life. They no longer feel an
acute sense of guilt for not wanting to grieve anymore. A final sign of a well-
traveled healing journey occurs when a grieving person is able to think about their
loss as a happy memory and not experience acute pain as they once did.
Types of Grief
Complicated Grief
According to the National Institutes of Health, about 7% of bereaved people
experience Complicated Grief, a chronic impairing form of grief that interferes
with the healing process. Risk factors for Complicated Grief include:
People feeling trapped in grief or who are experiencing intensified grief despite
the passage of several months can recover more quickly with support from a
professional grief therapist or mental health professional. It’s good to ask, “If you
had a broken foot, would you want to suffer until the broken bone healed, or
would you want to see a doctor and help the bone heal properly and more
quickly?”
Disenfranchised Grief
A person may experience disenfranchised grief when he or she cannot openly
acknowledge the loss, the loss is not socially accepted, or when the loss cannot be
publicly mourned. Causes may include a death related to HIV/AIDS, miscarriage or
stillbirth, the death of a same-sex partner or spouse, the death of the partner in an
extra-marital affair, or grieving someone you can’t remember (ex. a parent or
sibling who died when you were an infant or before you were born).
Traumatic Grief
A person may experience traumatic grief when a death is violent, unexpected, or
causes a person to die “before his or her time,” such as an infant, child, murder
victim, or accident victim. Traumatic grief can include exposure to war trauma
among military members, their families, and their children.
If the loss was unexpected or sudden, and particularly if the loved one died by
suicide, the pain can, at times, feel unbearable.
Children grieve, and grief can happen at an early age, but not in the same way as
adults. Children are likely to show their grief in less direct ways than adults.
Children move in and out of grief. One day they will seem to be fine and another
day they will not manage so well.
Children often have more needs during times of loss, which can lead to demanding
behavior as they try to get closeness, care, information, reassurance and support
from adults. The experience of loss affects each child differently. The child's age,
emotional maturity, the circumstances of the loss, and the 'connectedness' with
the person or whatever the child has lost are important factors. It is important to
look at each child individually and work out what will best help that child.
Some of the losses experienced by children are the same as those for adults:
─ Death of a grandparent.
Young children usually don't have the words to talk about their feelings in the way
that adults do. They may not even really know what they feel. Some of the ways
they show grief may be:
Preschool Children
─ In the years before school, children generally don't understand that death is
permanent.
─ The impact of the loss may be greater in the early years because they don't
really understand what is happening.
─ They don't understand what is real and what is not real, and they may believe
that their own wishes caused the person they loved to go away.
─ Losing someone who cares for them is a major stress that takes time and care
to overcome. In a way, it is like losing a part of themselves.
─ Young children don't have the words to express feelings and will show their
feelings in the way they act. They may be more clingy and needy or develop
problems separating from you.
─ Children can be very kind to others who are unhappy and try to comfort them
and then they need to go on playing again.
─ They begin to realize that when someone dies there is no coming back, but they
may ask what has happened many times over so that they can understand.
─ Some children feel responsible for the death or separation and think it was
because they were naughty.
─ They may also be worried about who will look after them--if they have lost a
parent, they may worry about losing the other parent as well.
─ They may be very matter-of-fact in the way they talk about death and want lots
of information, such as what happens to the body.
─ They may not know what it is they are feeling or know the words to say how
they feel but you will see it in their behavior and play.
─ The adults who love them may not be available to support the children if the
adults are very upset themselves.
─ People around them act differently, looking sad, crying, not keeping to routines,
or acting like everything is fine when it isn’t.
─ When a parent dies, children need to feel (with caring acts and words) that they
will not be abandoned.
─
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Developmental Ages & Possible Reactions to Death
Age Children Think Children Feel Children May
─ Death is temporary ─ Sad ─ Cry
and reversible ─ Anxious ─ Fight
─ Withdrawn ─ Express Interest in
─ Confused dead things
about ─ Act as if death
changes never happened
3 - 5 years
─ Angry
(preschool)
─ Scared
─ Cranky
(feelings are
acted out in
play
─ Provide a safe environment where children are able to express feelings through
play, water play, writing a letter, a story, a poem, painting or drawing.
─ Give clear and truthful information to children in a way that they can
understand. Children need to know what is happening even if they don't ask.
Children may not seem sad when you think they should be because they still
don't really understand what happened.
─ Allow children time to talk, ask questions, and share worries with a caring adult.
They might be very confused and need to ask lots of questions over and over
again. If you can't talk about it because of your own emotions, find another
trusted adult who is close to your child who can. If children can't talk to you
about the loss, they might feel that it is not safe to talk about it at all, and
they may continue to have muddled and scary feelings.
─ If your child feels unable to talk about his feelings. Say something like "Some
things are really hard to talk about, but talking can help. If you ever want to
talk about what has happened, let me know."
─ Stick to as many normal routines as you can. Too many changes will add further
stress.
─ Get support for yourself. Talk with your partner, a friend, a grief counselor, an
online support group, or listen to a podcast, which may fit your situation.
─ Ceremonies such as funerals can be important ways for children to help make
sense of the big changes in their lives. Sharing emotions can help people feel
connected to others.
─ Remember that children grieve in bursts. They have their own individual
reactions, and they feel loss just as much as adults; they may just show it
differently.
─ Allow many opportunities for extra closeness and comfort; snuggle while
watching a comforting TV show, work on a craft together, grab a camera and
go take pictures of nature together.
─ Review the warning signs of suicide and get professional help if you are
wondering if your child is at risk.
Grieving for a teen can be a whirlwind of emotions. While grief is normal and can
be processed in a healthy way, teens may not want to experience the whirlwind.
Like adults, teens grieve in different ways -- one teen may want total isolation for a
while; another may stuff the feelings and become the family comedian. Keep an
eye out for warning signs of alcohol or drug use, rage, antisocial behaviors,
changes in sleep patterns and suicide risk.
Keep an eye out for warning signs of alcohol or drug use, rage, antisocial
behaviors, changes in sleep patterns and suicide warning signs.
If any of these problems get in the way of your teen’s functioning at school or
home, or continue more than 1-2 months, get help from a mental health
professional who has experience treating children and teens with trauma or
traumatic grief.
─ Allow for open dialogue about religion and philosophy. Nurture them in finding
their own answers; if appropriate, be open to admitting that you’re still trying
to answer some questions, too, or connect them to trusted faith leaders.
─ Check in with other adults involved in their life – other parents, teachers, school
counselors, coaches.
For the first days, weeks or months following a sudden loss, friends and family may
find it helpful to take turns staying with the grieving person. It is not necessary (or
even possible) to stop the grief. What may be of most help is to:
─ Just be there
─ Allow the person to say what they need to say or to say nothing, to cry when
they need to cry, and to fully express all the painful and complicated
emotions they are experiencing
─ Don’t say that they shouldn't feel this way or that they shouldn't cry anymore
─ Don't argue if the person feels responsible for the loss—over time, gradually
and gently try to help the person see things from a different perspective
─ Listen--some more
─ If the grieving person talks about wanting to end his or her own life,
acknowledge the pain that the person is in. If the person is displaying suicide
warning signs, follow through with calling 1-800-273-8255, BestCare at 541-
475-6575, or 911 if you feel it is an emergency.
─ Good communication is necessary. If you’re having a bad day, it’s okay to say
so. Let others know what is helpful to you.
─ Consider the “gender” differences. Men and women grieve differently and at
a different pace. Usually women are more comfortable expressing their
emotions. Men often get busy, burying themselves at work or taking on
projects at home. Men may find this website helpful:
https://www.mantherapy.org/
─ Be sensitive to the needs of your partner. Grief is different for each person.
─ Don’t stress if the dishes are left, laundry piles up, and the yard isn’t as tidy
as before. Trusted friends will feel useful if you let them tackle these tasks for
you.
If you are worried about a friend, your child, or another family member and have
made the decision to get help, you may want to begin by pointing out what
concerns you. For example, “I'm sorry that you've experienced such a tremendous
loss. I know that I would feel lost if that happened to me. I’m worried about you
because…”
Sometimes defining what counseling is can help ease the person's anxiety about
counseling. It's okay to tell the person “You don't need to get your head shrunk,
and you don’t have to talk about family history for the past 100 years unless you
want to.”
You might say something like “If I were to give you an airplane and tell you to fly,
you wouldn't just jump in, start pushing buttons, and expect it to fly; right? First,
you would take flying lessons so that you knew how to handle the plane.
Sometimes, we need help learning how to cope when life feels like an airplane
spinning out of control. Just like learning to fly a plane, a counselor can help us
learn to deal with things in life that make us feel
like everything is spinning out of control. Let's
talk about making an appointment for you to see
a counselor, and together, your counselor and I
will help you.”
Podcasts can touch on pain and totally blindside you. Check in with your mental
health clinician or trusted friend about recommended podcasts.
─ https://www.dougy.org/grief-resources/grief-out-loud-podcast/
─ http://www.blogtalkradio.com/michelerosenthal/2013/12/31/depressi
on-and-identity-how-both-move-you-forward
─ http://www.healmyptsd.com/ptsd-podcasts
─ Meditation, perhaps in the form of prayer or yoga, can help you get the rest
you need.
─ At your next appointment, let your family doctor know what has happened
so he or she can help monitor your health.
Outside Support –
─ We don’t have to isolate ourselves during our grief.
─ Let your friends and family help you. Reflect back on how good you feel
when you help others.
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Feelings –
─ Read books or articles on the process of grief so that you can identify what
you are feeling and have some ideas on how to help yourself.
─ Crying is good. You feel lighter after you have had a good cry. Consider
sharing your tears with other loved ones. We laugh together, why not cry
together as well?
─ Keeping a journal is a good way to identify feelings and also to see progress.
─ Grief Groups and Hospice can help you prepare ahead for holidays,
anniversaries, and other events.
─ If you need some alone time, take it, as often as you need to…
─ Pamper yourself in small ways; find a hobby that brings you peace in solitude
(music, stained glass work, painting,).
─ Notice what you do right. Notice when you handle something well. Notice a
gift from nature (a bird playing in a puddle, a puppy playing in the park).
Signs that grief 's journey is less turbulent include the slow return of pleasure or
joy , looking forward to things in the future, a returned or new sense of
purpose, reaching out to others and re-engaging in life, and a lack of fear toward
the stages of grief. This is a process that does not happen all at once. It occurs in
small pieces in a back and forth manner.
Immediate Action
─ Call 911 or take the person to the Emergency Room
─ Do not leave the person alone, not even for a minute—not even to go to the
bathroom.
─ Inform dispatch of any threats toward emergency responders.
─ You may also inform dispatch if the person is experiencing a mental illness, is a
child or youth, and if it would be best to not respond with sirens and
lights. Note: It is still up to the response team to decide how to respond.
541.475.6575
Bereavement Groups
Redmond Area Bereavement Group
Facilitator Herb Baker: 503.708.3047 or [email protected]
Compassionate Friends
Contact Carol Palmer: 541-408-0667 or [email protected]
Online Resources
Survivors of Suicide - http://www.survivorsofsuicide.com/
To help those who have lost a loved one to suicide resolve their
grief and pain in their own personal way. This site will offer
information that will help answer some of those questions, as well
as provide a safe place for survivors and friends of survivors to
share their struggle and pain and offer comfort and understanding
to others who have experienced a similar loss.
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline -
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/help-yourself/loss-survivors/
Provides a comprehensive list of resources for suicide loss survivors.
541.475.6575
Grief and Healing BestCarePrevention.Com Page 33
The First Step
is always the hardest.
BestCare Prevention
www.BestCarePrevention.com