Complicated Grieving and Bereavement: Understanding and Treating People Experiencing LossGerry R Cox, Robert A Bendiksen, Robert G Stevenson Routledge, 20/12/2018 - 328 páginas Losses may provide a turning point where an individual faces personal and social choices. Still, one may derive significance through the experience of loss, while another may encounter bereavement with less consequence. "Complicated Grieving and Bereavement: Understanding and Treating People Experiencing Loss" examines complicated grief in special populations, including the mentally ill, POW-MIA survivors, the differentially-abled, suicide survivors, bereaved children, those experiencing death at birth, death in schools, and palliative-care death. |
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Página 10
... sense of meaning ? Do children need “ adult ” models to be able to cope ? Do we " socialize " people too much , and by doing so make their grieving more complicated ? The next two chapters focus upon children and traumatic death . David ...
... sense of meaning ? Do children need “ adult ” models to be able to cope ? Do we " socialize " people too much , and by doing so make their grieving more complicated ? The next two chapters focus upon children and traumatic death . David ...
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... sense out of the death. Yet as humans, we engage in meaning- making. Richard Gilbert responds to the realities of spiritual abuse by offering suggestions for those providing care on how to aid, rather than hurt, people in their ...
... sense out of the death. Yet as humans, we engage in meaning- making. Richard Gilbert responds to the realities of spiritual abuse by offering suggestions for those providing care on how to aid, rather than hurt, people in their ...
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... are. There is nothing “wrong with us” when we are bereaved or when we grieve. Bereavement and grieving in themselves are not complicated in this medical sense of the term. We should also resist the idea that complication entails anything.
... are. There is nothing “wrong with us” when we are bereaved or when we grieve. Bereavement and grieving in themselves are not complicated in this medical sense of the term. We should also resist the idea that complication entails anything.
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... sense of place in the larger scheme of things within which we find and make meaning are broken, undermined, or threatened. We feel undone, at a loss as to how to go on, anxious, insecure, unsafe, vulnerable. We may also feel abandoned ...
... sense of place in the larger scheme of things within which we find and make meaning are broken, undermined, or threatened. We feel undone, at a loss as to how to go on, anxious, insecure, unsafe, vulnerable. We may also feel abandoned ...
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... sense of things, makes us feel confused, disoriented, abandoned in an unsafe, insecure, chaotic, irrational, and meaningless world. Vulnerability to suffering makes us feel anxious for ourselves and others, fearful of what might happen ...
... sense of things, makes us feel confused, disoriented, abandoned in an unsafe, insecure, chaotic, irrational, and meaningless world. Vulnerability to suffering makes us feel anxious for ourselves and others, fearful of what might happen ...
Índice
CHAPTER 14 | |
Meeting Parents Needs | |
CHAPTER 16 | |
CHAPTER 17 | |
CHAPTER 18 | |
CHAPTER 19 | |
CHAPTER 20 | |
CHAPTER 21 | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Complicated Grieving and Bereavement: Understanding and Treating People ... Gerry R. Cox,Robert Bendiksen,Robert G. Stevenson Visualização de excertos - 2002 |
Complicated Grieving and Bereavement: Understanding and Treating People ... Gerry R. Cox,Robert A. Bendiksen,Robert G. Stevenson Pré-visualização indisponível - 2019 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
able adults anger Anne anticipatory grief anxiety Arctic asked baby become behavior believe bereaved children bereavement caregivers carer casket child complicated grief coping counselor culture dead Death Education deceased depression died difficult disabilities dying emotional experience experienced express extraordinary complications family members family therapy father fear feelings forgiveness friends funeral director grief process grief reactions grieving guilt happened healing homicide hospital husband impact individual Inuit Jack Anawak Jessica Journal Laura lives loss loved memories mental illness Monica mother mourning Mumma murder one’s pain Palliative Care parents patient person physical Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder pregnancy problem professional Pynoos questions Rando relationship relearning restorative justice rituals self-differentiation sense share social support someone spiritual abuse stories stress suffering suicide survivors symptoms talk Tania therapeutic helper therapist therapy things told traumatic understand victims viewing the body young griever