Showing posts with label Sudden Loss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sudden Loss. 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:


Thursday, July 15, 2010

Thursday's Therapy - Complicated Mourning ~Therese A. Rando, Ph.D. - Part One






Thursday's Therapy

Complicated Mourning

~Therese A. Rando, Ph.D.


Part One




Tommy and I went to a wonderful conference in Chattanooga by Dr. Therese A. Rando, a premiere Death and Trauma expert this weekend. The conference was divided into two full-day sessions. Dr. Rando taught Grief and Mourning Interventions the first day, and on Sudden and Traumatic Death and its subsequent causation of Complicated Mourning the second day. We would like to share with you some of the things we are learning over the coming Thursday's Therapy posts.



High Risk Factors Predisposing a Person to Complicated Mourning

~Adapted from Rando, (1993)


First what is Complicated Mourning? Basically, it is prolonged mourning. "Normal" grief is not able to tackle all of the components with which a bereaved person is grappling, so the grief becomes "prolonged." Such a term can be confusing, for in some cases "Complicated Mourning" is an indicator of pathology. But a loss as tremendous as the Loss of One's Child is ALWAYS followed by "Complicated Mourning" as it has so many facets and dimensions that an otherwise "normal" grief couldn't begin to address.



So what are the "High Risk Factors" that predispose one to "Complicated Mourning"?


A) Risk Factors associated with the Specific Death:


▪ 1) Sudden and Unexpected Death, typically from

⁃ Accidents
⁃ Disasters
⁃ Suicides
⁃ Homicides

especially if the death was

⁃ Traumatic
⁃ Violent,
⁃ Mutilating
⁃ Preventable
(It is due to either Intentional or Negligent Behavior onsomeone's part, which did not have to happen)



Dr. Rando says,
"Whenever one deals with a sudden death, one is in fact dealing with a "Traumatic Death" because the suddenness and lack of warning personally traumatizes the mourner."


She goes on to say,
"Traumatic Bereavement" is the state of having suffered the loss of a loved one when grief and mourning over the death is overpowered by the traumatic stress brought about by its circumstances.

"Sudden Death" and "Traumatic Bereavement" always present the mourner, at least for a period of time, with "Complicated Mourning."

▪ 2) Loss of a Child - Anytime someone loses a child to death, there WILL be "Complicated Mourning." according to Dr. Rando. It is simply too great of a loss to go through in a few months or a few years time.


(My understanding is that the Acute-Grief portion of "Complicated Mourning" is expected by the experts to be at least five to seven years in duration, while the on-going mourning will actually continue throughout one's life.)

▪ 3) Sudden or Unexpected Natural Death ("Natural" in that it is caused due to something going wrong within the deceased person's own body)



B) Factors Associated with Before and After Death Circumstances


▪ 1) Relationship with the deceased was markedly
⁃ Angry, Ambivalent, or Dependent
⁃ Characterized by Insecure Attachments:
⁃ Anxious attached between person and the deceased

⁃ Attachment Bonding was avoided, broken or suspended due to relational problems between the person and the deceased


▪ 2) Prior or Concurrent Issues in the Mourner of

⁃ Unaccommodated losses and/or stresses
⁃ Any Mental Health problems or addictive behaviors untreated


▪ 3) The Mourner's Perception of Lack of Support
⁃ By family
⁃ By one's community
⁃ By needed experts, mental health, doctors, police, courts, etc.



Me, Dr. Rando, and Tommy
July 10, 2010



Thank you so much Dr. Therese Rando for your invaluable contributions to the field of Grief, Loss, Mourning, and Trauma. And we appreciate so much your availing to us of this information that should prove to be so helpful to our walking through our necessarily Complicated Mourning in as healthy a way as possible.












Treatment of Complicated Mourning, Rando, (1993)

Friday, February 19, 2010

Friday's Faith - "A Dozen Roses" ~Alan Pedersen








Friday's Faith -



"A Dozen Roses"


~Alan Pedersen




After celebrating Valentine's Day this week...I want to share this poignant Valentine's poem that grieving-father Alan Pedersen wrote for his 18-year-old baby girl who has been in Heaven since August, 2001:




A Dozen Roses

By Alan Pedersen



If I had a dozen roses, I know just what I’d do

I’d give each one a name that reminded me of you

The first rose I’d call sunshine, because you brighten everyday

The second would be beauty, the kind that never goes away

The third rose would be priceless, like those hugs you gave to me

I’d name the fourth rose silly, oh how funny you could be

Rose five of course is patience, something you have helped me find

The sixth rose would be memories, the gift you left behind

The seventh and the eighth rose would for sure be faith and grace

Nine would be unique because no one can take your place

The tenth rose well that’s easy, I’d simply name it love

Eleven would be angel, I know you’re watching from above

I’d think about that twelfth rose, and I’d really take my time

After all these roses are for you my Valentine

I’m sending them to heaven in every color that I know

So twelve I’ll name forever, that’s how long I’ll love you so




Alan Pedersen has been performing for more than 25 years. An accomplished singer and award winning songwriter, he spent several years writing and recording music in Nashville, Tennessee. Alan has had several songs recorded by other artists. Alan has worked as an actor, stand-up comedian, keynote speaker/emcee, and in radio as a network news and sports reporter for Westwood One Communications. Currently living in Englewood, Colorado, Alan is the father of four boys and an angel. Reach him through? www.everashleymusic.com.











Picture of roses from http://bit.ly/atu5V7
Alan Pedersen's website: www.everashleymusic.com


Friday, January 8, 2010

Friday's Faith - Is there a “Cure” for Grief?





Friday's Faith


Is there a “Cure” for Grief?



A man whose wife of 35 years died 12 months ago does not suddenly walk out his front door today and say, “Okay, I’ve resolved that issue.” Parents whose 4-year-old daughter drowned in a swimming pool do not announce five years later, “We’ve accepted our daughter’s death. It’s okay.” Three weeks after the best friend of a 14-year-old is shot and killed at her high school, the teenager is not likely to say, “I’m healing.” Yet, while a growing number of researchers on loss and bereavement question the use of such words as “acceptance,” “healing,” “recovery,” and “closure,” the media continue to use them. This gives the public the false impression that, despite the tragic proportions of the story being told, the grief will soon be over.

~Robert Baugher




As I told my client this week, going through grief is not exactly "recovery," "closure, "healing," or "cure." But grief does need to be processed; it is very tedious; it is very painful, and along the way, there IS "comfort." That's it! Not cure, not closure, but comfort. And the very slow processing of feelings, memories, sorting through questions of faith, does result in a weaving together of our life that includes new realities we never asked for, but they are ours with which to cope.


It is like I mentioned to Tommy tonight, when God was giving Jesus the cup that He was to drink that included His own death, and Jesus accepted it after much agony and distress (sweating drops of blood), nobody for a minute thought He should be "happy" about walking into such a forboding loss. Yet, do people around us expect us to pop out of our grief, pop out of our loss and celebrate holidays, and celebrate life with them? Yes, they do. But that is unrealistic if not downright mean.



We are "in touch with our emotions" which is healthy. We are not playing pretend. Our lives have been torn from the inside out. We look a lot like victims of many other of life's storms- in shock, sad, dismayed, questioning who we are now, where we are to live, what do we want to do with our lives, what is really important, and do I really want to take the valuable time out of life to celebrate magical holidays that are man-made and do nothing for me spiritually?



We now have a new appreciation for numbering our days on this earth and doing what's most important versus the urgent, the expected, the ritualistic, the commercialized, the programmed. No, we want real. We want God. We want spiritual growth, not playing pretend. But we still may not be very happy.


Jesus modeled many times how to grieve by how He lived His life in many grievous situations. He struggled against evil, wept over the death of loved ones, and wrestled with God over the prospect of His own death. Though our struggles differ, like Jesus we struggle with our own cup that has been handed to us.



Jesus struggled intensely at the Garden of Gethsemane with the cup God was asking Him to bear while we struggle intensely in a more prolonged, rest-of-our-life-kind-of-way of facing the cup we are asked to bear. Even as Jesus questioned and pleaded with His Father, so too we beg and are still begging, "Is there not any other way than this? If possible, let this cup pass from me! May each of us, like Jesus, even as we die inside, ultimately say to our God, "Nevertheless, not my will, but Thine be done." After such distressing struggle against evil and death, the Bible does not indicate that Jesus left the Garden-of-Great-Struggle with a peachy-keen grin on His face. So too, neither will we.











Robert Baugher's full article about the length of grief and how our society (via the media) measures grief:

http://opentohope.com/grief-and-the-holidays/how-long-according-to-the-media-should-grief-last/


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