Showing posts with label Coping with Grief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coping with Grief. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Thursday's Therapy ~ Good Grief - A Short Animated Documentary About Grief ~Griever, Fiona Dalwood





Thursday's Therapy

A Short Animated 
Documentary 
About 
Grief

~by Griever, Fiona Dalwood
Writer, Director, Animator








Good Grief, a remarkably powerful and touching animated short film by Australian director Fiona Dalwood, shows how five different individuals cope with loss. Whether the loss was that of a parent, a bunny, an amputated leg or a good friend by suicide, each person’s compelling story of grief rings familiar with anyone who has had (a) loss of their own.

Inspired by the loss of her own mother and the grief that ensued, director Fiona Dalwood went about finding out how the experience of loss transforms us. With a shoestring budget and months of hard work, she made Good Grief, a beautiful short film that has been described as “adorable and heartfelt.” Accessible to children and adults alike, it is being used in educational programs as a starting point to discuss the process of grief and what some of the positive outcomes of grief can be.








Good Grief

(Winner of at least ten (10) film awards)

~Fiona Dalwood









Article presenting the animated Grief film:


Saturday, January 7, 2012

Saturday's Sayings - With Child-Loss Grief and Trauma...Some "Tools" to Help




"May God bless and comfort all this New Year's 2012. May we continue to trudge down this road of pain and sorrow and may it "soften" a little."


~A lovely New Year's wish (and picture) from a grieving mother, "KLJ"

on The Compassionate Friends of Atlanta site,

one of the several child-loss grief groups on Facebook to which I belong

https://www.facebook.com/groups/43057397614/



Saturday's Sayings


With Child-Loss Grief and Trauma...


Some "Tools" to Help Us





A grieving mother sent me an email this week, asking what are some of the child-loss grief groups available, as I have mentioned in our blog some to which I belong, so today I will share a few of them with you in this post. One is quoted from above, The Compassionate Friends of Atlanta. It is one of the many branches of The Compassionate Friends, USA (TCF) which has a webpage which can be followed on Facebook. TCF also has many local groups, not just "virtual" groups to which you can belong (for free!) It is designed for grieving parents, grandparents, and siblings of a deceased child to come together to give and receive support during this devastating loss of a child.


TCF's main "virtual" site is https://www.facebook.com/TCFUSA


Its main webpage can be found at http://www.compassionatefriends.org/home.aspx


And its local chapter locator site can be found at


http://www.compassionatefriends.org/Find_Support/Chapters/Chapter_Locator.aspx ~


Tommy and I joined our local TCF group here in Knoxville, Tennessee, "The Compassionate Friends, Knoxville" (we have no worldwide-web exposure yet!) about two years ago, and it has been such a great help for us.





General Helping Tools:


Ten Ways of Giving


The way of celebration: gratitude

The way of generativity: helping others grow

The way of forgiveness: set yourself free

The way of courage: speak up, speak out

The way of humour: connect with joy

The way of respect: look deeper and find value

The way of compassion: feel for others

The way of loyalty: love across time

The way of listening: offer deep presence

The way of creativity: invent and innovate


~ STEPHEN POST & JILL NEIMARK,

in "Why Good Things Happen to Good People"




*****



Spiritually-Supporting Helping Tools:



A Sharpened Focus

Day 200


"When you know that this life is not all there is," says Anne Graham Lotz, "and you know that one day you are going to be standing before God giving an account of your life, and you know that there is a great big eternity out there when we are going to worship the Lamb and forever glorify Him, it gives you a seriousness about life now. It sharpens your focus and motivates you to live every moment of your life fully to the glory of God."


Train yourself to focus on eternity. Focus on the big picture, not on your own limited life on earth.


In some ways you probably feel more unfocused than you have ever felt in your life, as if you are walking around in a constant fog of grief. In other ways you may feel more alert than ever because you are observing life from a completely different perspective. Many things—from the simple to the complex—take on a different meaning or level of importance to you. Sharpen your focus on the God of eternity by reading His Word daily. Stop trying to handle your tumultuous life alone.


"If the axe is dull and he does not sharpen its edge, then he must exert more strength. Wisdom has the advantage of giving success" (Ecclesiastes 10:10 nasb).


Eternal God, grant me the wisdom and the focus to recommit my days to You. Help me to understand the seriousness of following Your eternal plan as written in the Bible. Amen.


~by Anne Graham Lotz, thanks to Grieving Mom, "JW-T" for sharing





*****




Emotionally Supportive Helping Tools ~ Child-Loss Grief Groups:



Celebrating earlier this morning on the One-Year anniversary with Barbara, the founder of "Grieving Mothers," https://www.facebook.com/groups/Grievingmothers/ another of the several child-loss grief groups to which I belong:






~~~"Happy Birthday" to "Grieving Mothers"~~~


Dearest Barbara,


You are so amazing to be able to share so much of yourself with us. Your endurance / perseverance through grief gives us hope and direction. I know your responsiveness to all of us on this site has to require an incredible devotion of heart and spirit. I just wanted you to know I so appreciate you, and all of your giftings to us. I quote you so often on my blog ~( I hope you're not sick of my borrowing from you so often for my "Saturday's Sayings," on my blog, not to mention using the many wonderful pics you share with us)!!!


It has been amazing to me to watch this group grow by leaps and bounds in just one year! Thank you for inviting me in a year ago; I lost my 19-yr-old "forever teen angel" just 5 years ago, and I have found group support with other grieving moms and dads has been a tremendous help for me in my own coping and healing. I am a Christian psychotherapist, and a grieving mother; healing through this grief and trauma has been quite a challenge for me; my body is still reeling from all the trauma it has been through in these few short years, and finding helps for my woundedness is so greatly appreciated. I cannot imagine 25 years of compiled pain; may we all season as gracefully as you seem to.


Thank you so much for your servant's heart for all of us. May God bless you and keep you oh so close to His heart. I will be honored to light a candle for your precious little Jeremy today. Today, I am sharing this picture with you that I found at Dr. Athena Staik's fb page, but I want you to imagine that this is a giant heart of love formed in Heaven today as all our precious angels surround your Jeremy with all their hearts of love, holding him close in heart until you get there to hold him not only close to your heart as you do now, but also, finally, close within your own mothering arms.




*****




Some Mentally- and Physically-Supportive Tools to Help...



Newsweek shares tips for helping your brain in this week's edition!




Clues from a January 1, 2012 Newsweek Magazine article on how to


from "Buff Your Brain"


(Sharing just a few tips with you that editor Sharon Begley presents)



Although most of us think of motor skills and cognitive skills as like oil and water, in fact a number of studies have found that refining your sensory-motor skills can bolster cognitive ones. No one knows exactly why, but it may be that the two brain systems are more interconnected than we realize. So learn to knit, or listen to classical music, or master juggling, and you might be raising your IQ.



While improving your brain takes work, the good news is there are some accessible ways to go about it. Aerobic exercise buffs the brain as well as the quads. Walking 30 minutes a day five times a week stimulates production of BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), a molecule that nurtures the creation of the new neurons and synapses that underlie learning. In neuroimaging studies, scientists led by Arthur Kramer of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have shown that exercise increases gray matter in the region of the hippocampus that processes new knowledge and dispatches it to permanent storage in the frontal cortex.



If a half-hour walk leaves you tired, good: a midday nap not only can restore brain power to its fully awake best but can also raise it beyond what it would have been without some shut-eye. In a 2010 study, psychology professor Matthew Walker and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, found that a nap may not merely restore brain power but also raise it. Students who took a 90-minute nap at 2 p.m. after a task that taxes the hippo-campus—learning the names of some 120 faces they had never seen—retained more than their non-napping peers. Even more surprising, they also learned new face-name pairs better at 6 p.m. than they had before the nap, and better than the non-nappers. “In people who stayed awake, there was a deterioration in their memory capacity, but a nap restored that capacity to levels even higher than before the nap,” says Walker. So kudos to Nike and the host of Silicon Valley companies like Google that provide nap rooms for employees.


EEGs, electrodes that record brain activity, suggest how that happened. The number of bursts of electrical activity called sleep spindles—Walker calls them “champagne pops in the brain”—that people experienced during their naps predicted how much their ability to learn would improve once they awoke. Sleep spindles, he suspects, indicate activity in the hippocampus that moves information from that region into the cortex for permanent storage. It’s like moving data from a USB stick onto a hard drive, which “both consolidates into long-term storage the information you offload and leaves you a renewed capacity for absorbing new information—learning,” says Walker. The better we move information from the hippocampus (working memory) into the cortex, the more information we can access when we need it.



Even without the midday nap, the brain has a way of carving out its own downtime, characterized by what’s called the “default-mode network”—basically, brain activity that takes place when you’re daydreaming or keeping your mind blank. Using functional MRI, scientists at Japan’s Tohoku University measured cerebral blood flow in 63 volunteers asked to keep their minds blank. Those with the greatest blood flow in the white matter that connects one neuron to another scored highest on a task requiring them to quickly generate novel ideas, the researchers reported in the journal PLoS One in November. Creativity arises from seeing connections others miss, so it makes sense that increasing the activity in white matter by letting the brain rest in default mode supports creativity. So put away the BlackBerry and let your brain idle.


Too hyper to do that? Then go all in with a jolt of caffeine. It might not make you more creative, but coffee can make your mind sharper, as zillions of java addicts will swear. A 2011 study in Nature Neuroscience backs them up: in lab rodents, caffeine strengthens brain connections. Rats given shots of joe comparable to two cups of coffee had stronger electrical activity between neurons in the part of the hippocampus called CA2 than they did otherwise, found Serena Dudek of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and colleagues. Stronger connectivity means better learning and memory.



Here's a brain-buffing trifecta:


  • Memory training +
  • Fueled by caffeine +
  • Interspersed with good sleep +
  • Aerobic conditioning, +
  • Computer-based brain exercises to hone attention, +
  • A regimen of reading, +
  • Watching, +
  • Doing +
  • Broken up by ample mental downtime:


It promises to add up to a smarter you in 2012 and beyond. (!!!)



~Sharon Begley, the science columnist and science editor of Newsweek*




*****




Best Wishes in the New Year as you lovingly nurture yourself through your great grief.


Feel free to let us know what kinds of "tools" have been the most helpful to you!









*Sharon Bagley is also the coauthor of the 2002 book The Mind and the Brain and the author of the 2007 book Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain.Sharon Begley is the science columnist and science editor of Newsweek.She is the coauthor of the 2002 book The Mind and the Brain and the author of the 2007 book Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain.


Monday, October 31, 2011

Tuesday's Trust - 'Tis the Optional Season!





Tuesday's Trust


'Tis the Optional Season!






For the past two years, we have not "done" Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving is now just three weeks away. From this distance, we are thinking maybe we can have the family over again (just our little family - our son Nathan, our son Rollin, his wife/our daughter-in-law Stephanie, and their baby/our new grand baby Ellie). But then again, we pause, and question ourselves…


Are we lying to ourselves???


What can and can't we do these days?


How different are we?



One hazard for me is having to celebrate the holiday at a certain given time, and I have no idea how I am going to be at that given time. Putting holiday pressure on myself (on top of my-already-demanding-grief) feels claustrophobic -- nowhere to run, nowhere to hide if all expectations are there to "perform."


There are cultural expectations for the holiday. There are familial expectations for the holiday, so there is some level of anxiety beginning to creep in. Early on in our grief, we didn't think in terms of options as we do now. We just felt we had to "celebrate." Now we give ourselves room to have "options"!



Otherwise, it seems like a "holiday" could easily turn into a "get-through-it" day.


So a day that should be "special" for the intended sweetness entailed in it, could become more like a "going through the motions" day, just trying to keep our deep sorrow at bay…





Last year, my family-of-origin down in Georgia had a combination Thanksgiving Dinner AND Birthday Celebration for my precious mother. I knew I could not do that get-together because a large crowd of family is too overwhelming for my system now. But it made the holiday especially sad because I couldn't be with my mother to celebrate a special time with her. (What was great though was, as it turned out, my 97-year-old mother didn't even want to go!!!)


(I wish just my mother and I could have gotten together. That was our style when I went home to visit -- just she and I would spend time together, maybe one brother and his wife would come over for a little while, but most of the time, it was the two of us (and one of her helpers). We would have the best times together. Quality time. Relaxed. Unhurried. Special. Often we would laugh together. And often, we would cry together. (We were both child-loss parents, so we had that in common; we each "got it.") So sweet.



But, I digress… So as of right now, I have no idea what we'll do.


But I do hope for some sort of sweet quality fellowship with my precious "little" family.


We'll take it one step at a time and trust that the best solution surfaces . . .



What about you?


What are your holiday plans so far?









(There is a sweet story about holidays and loss that goes with today's picture; you might want to check it out at the following blog site:)

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Wednesday's Woe - Spring...Midst Death's Demise






Wednesday's Woe


Spring...Midst Death's Demise





Redbuds, Daffodils, and Tulips are out,

Bradford Pears and Cherry trees are blooming,

Iris, Hibiscus, and Camellia out,

Almond Tree, Dogwoods, Lenten Rose pluming!



"31st Anniversary!" I shout!

"Still in love, my how the years are zooming!"

Nature springs alive with beauty, no doubt...

For my sons in their prime, life is booming!

My baby's in Heaven, flying about~

God's in His Heaven; my soul He's grooming...



So why in this Beauty, does my heart pout...

Though life's good, parts of me are e'er gloomy?

Some parts of my life have veered off the route


My soul's at peace, but loss is e'er looming...




God, hold Your child as she cries her eyes out!

O'erwhelm my heart with Your peace and soothe me...




Thank You, though Your ways are past finding out,

Midst death's demise, You cause New Life to sprout!











Poem - Spring...Midst Death's Demise - 4/7/10 - Angie Bennett Prince

Friday, January 8, 2010

Thursday's Therapy - Ways We Grieve - Part One




Thursday's Therapy

Ways We Grieve

Part One


The following article is provided on the internet via the Health Library. It provides a summary of some of the many factors with which we are faced when we find ourselves dealing with sudden loss. Mr. Fridman presents Therese Rando's theory of how we grieve called "The Six R's." Rando's theory is just one view of the Ways We Grieve.


Unique Concerns When Grieving for a Sudden Loss


by Sherman M. Fridman, JD


The sudden loss of a loved one can be one of the most painful and difficult things to go through. But, the experts say, there is no one correct way to grieve.


Famed British historian Arnold Toynbee said,

"There are always two parties to a death, the person who dies and the survivors who are bereaved...and in the apportionment of suffering, the survivor takes the brunt."


Any loss of a loved one is tragic and painful, but when death occurs from a sudden, unexpected cause such as an accident, natural disaster, suicide or murder, the reactions of the survivors in coping with their grief are more intense and varied than they may be following a death that occurs after a prolonged illness.


An unexpected loss brings with it factors that do not normally exist when death is anticipated. Not only must the survivors cope with feelings of grief, but they often have to cope with intrusion into their mourning by the media or with the vagaries and slowness of the criminal justice system. Other factors adding to the burden of an unexpected death are the lack of an opportunity to say goodbye or to plan for the financial future of the family left behind.



No Time to Prepare


Donald Mossman, PhD, director of graduate studies at Concordia College in Michigan and teacher of a college course on death and dying, identifies another factor, which is often overlooked by sudden loss survivors and their caregivers.


Regardless of the cause, a sudden death deprives the survivors of what Mossman calls anticipatory grief. This is the grief that begins when a loved one is diagnosed with a terminal illness. It helps prepare the survivor for the coming loss and reduces the intensity of the psychological reaction to the eventual death.


Violent Death


The mind has trouble comprehending sudden, violent death. Deaths involving violence or mutilation engender frightening feelings in the survivors, ranging from terror to anxiety to powerlessness, making them particularly traumatic.

Often the violence of the act resulting in death, arouses strong feelings of hostility in the mourner, causing severe internal conflict leading to guilt, shame, or depression.


Suicide


Family members of someone who has committed suicide also face special burdens. According to Judith M. Stillion, PhD, a professor of psychology at Western Carolina University, many family survivors of suicide have higher levels of guilt, shame, and anger than do survivors of sudden loss from other causes. Persons grieving a loss through suicide are often left with questions, such as why their loved ones killed themselves, and what, if anything, they might have done to prevent the suicide. These questions are often unanswerable and can prolong the process of grieving and coming to grips with the loss.


"Natural" Causes


Heart attacks and strokes are major causes of death in this country, and these deaths are often sudden and unexpected. The sudden loss of a loved one, even from these "natural" causes, can be as unexpected and devastating to the survivors as the death of a loved one from a murder or an accident.


Emotional Challenges


What most, if not all, survivors of sudden loss have in common are a series of emotional challenges, including:


Disruption of family functioning


Redefining of responsibilities and roles within the family


Challenges to the survivors' belief systems


Financial change


Public intrusion into private anguish


Lack of opportunity to say goodbye and resolve other unfinished business with the deceased


Hurt, often inadvertent, caused by the well-intentioned words and actions of other family members and friends



Therese Rando's "The Six Rs"


Therese A. Rando, PhD, is a Rhode Island psychologist specializing in loss and grief counseling. She has identified six mourning processes that survivors of any loss must go through in order to achieve a healthy accommodation of the loss.


However, Rando acknowledges that survivors of sudden loss often have a more difficult time with one or more of the processes, which she identifies as "the six Rs."


These (grief) processes are:


Recognize the loss—Acknowledge that the loss has occurred and understand it.


React to the separation—Survivors should allow themselves to experience the pain and give expression to their feelings of loss.


Recollect and re-experience the deceased and the relationship—However, the recollections should be realistic, both good and not so good.


Relinquish the old attachments of the deceased—This involves the attachments of the deceased, not the survivors' attachment to or feelings for the deceased. For example, just because the deceased's clothes have been donated to charity doesn't mean that all memories have been disposed of as well.


Readjust to move adaptively into the new world—Rando suggests that this be done through survivors adopting new ways of continuing on with their lives while not forgetting their old ones. The Hospice Foundation of America (HFA), says that survivors never fully detach their feelings for the deceased and that grieving should not be looked upon as a means of letting go of the person who has died.


Reinvest—Survivors need to reestablish close personal feelings with the living.



There Is No "Right" Way to Grieve


Survivors need to be patient with themselves. Mourning is an individual process that should be done at the survivor's pace, and not be dictated by friends or family.


Elizabeth K. Carll, PhD, a psychologist specializing in trauma, violence, and family relationships, believes that there is no "cookie cutter" approach to the grieving process.


The Hospice Foundation of America, as well as Dr. Carll, debunk the theory that we slowly and predictably recover from grief.


The HFA calls grief "an uneven process" with no time line.

Dr. Carll emphasizes that the circumstances of the loss as well as anniversary dates of the loss are significant for the survivors and should be acknowledged.

The HFA also says that grievers need opportunities to share their memories and grief. They are not best left alone and they do need support.


Don't tell survivors to take their mind off the loss or to keep busy.


Becoming Active Again


Dr. Carll recommends that survivors of sudden loss not dwell on the negativity of the event, but rather turn their response to the loss into a positive, active experience. She suggests that a survivor grieving over the loss of a loved one from an accident campaign for tougher safety regulations. The family of a murder victim could campaign for victim's rights. And a survivor could positively respond to a sudden loss caused by illness by becoming active in the fight against the disease.


No one experiences or copes with a loss in the same way, but when the loss is sudden and violent, the emotional and behavioral characteristics are intensified.

It is this intensity that must be focused upon so that normal reactions to the psychological trauma of sudden loss do not become the foundation of a dysfunctional lifestyle for the survivors.


******



(Thank you to http://bit.ly/6GzUIk for access to this article from Health Library.)












Picture: http://www.instantshift.com/2009/12/19/100-beautiful-examples-of-black-and-white-photography/

Article: http://bit.ly/6GzUIk