Although loss is a nearly universal experience,
there is considerable variety in how people grieve. Bereavement is always a painful experience,
but some people return to their normal life rapidly, experiencing uncomplicated bereavement,
while others never do. All that defines uncomplicated bereavement and separates it from
complicated bereavement is not yet known. However, some critical facts have been identified.
Loss is a powerful stressor in life; even those going through uncomplicated
bereavement are likely to experience many symptoms of anxiety and depression and to undergo
physiological changes which reduce the body's ability to fight off disease. While popular notions
suggest a steady and orderly progression of bereavement ill stages, people grieve in highly
individualized ways.
Depending on prior losses and on the particulars of file current loss, symptoms
of anxiety may be most prominent or may mix with or be overshadowed by symptoms of
depression. There is often a sense of unreality associated with first becoming aware of the loss.
The griever may refuse to believe it has happened and can feel out of contact with those around
him or her. Many people feel guilt because riley do not initially feel any pain about the loss.
They worry that they are abnormal or secretly unloving. This experience of numbness does not
imply a poor relationship. The numbness and sense of unreality may be replaced later with a
sense of profound anxiety or sadness. This stage may be marked by repeatedly seeking the
person who has died, possibly even feeling they briefly hear or see the deceased.
As the loss becomes "real," grievers often experience overwhelming waves of
sadness (and sometimes anger) that come suddenly with reminders of tile loss. Interspersed
among the low and painful periods can be brief bursts of almost ecstatic and enthusiastic
feelings, which may again cause the individual to feel guilt. Wide swings in mood are, however,
a normal part of bereavement. Most individuals feeling the ordinary pain of bereavement do not
need counseling or medication to adjust. They may, however, benefit from participation in
groups for those who have had recent losses.
While there is no standard for what is healthy and unhealthy in bereavement,
there are some warning signs of poor adjustment. Extensive avoidance of painful feelings and of
reminders of the person who has died is not healthy. Coping by avoidance may appear to be
working because it minimizes early distress but it appears to place the griever at greater risk
later. Those who find that they cannot bring themselves to go to the funeral or who isolate
themselves from their grief experience with distracting activities, (even those of planning the
funeral) may be at increased risk for psychological and physical difficulties.
While a death usually disrupts the ability of tile mourner to carry on daily
activities, a crippling loss in ability to function indicates tile need for therapy. Those who
function most poorly one month after a loss often fail to regain normal function even one to two
years later. Thus even very early after a loss it may be valuable for some individuals to seek
counseling or antidepressant medication. Ironically, starting or increasing the use of
tranquilizing medication with a loss may interfere with the natural process of grief.
Some of those who adjust poorly to a loss will express that difficulty in
physical ailments. Those who see a physician with complaints that are not easily diagnosed or
treated medically may be experiencing unresolved bereavement. Medical pursuit of diagnosis
and treatment of such complaints can result in greater damage because of risks from diagnostic
procedures mid from unnecessary medical interventions for problems that will not respond to
treatment (such as dizziness, fatigue, irritability, vague pains etc.).
Guided mourning, using imagery and behavioral assignments, is a powerful
tool for provoking and safely reviewing thoughts and painful memories. Although complicated
bereavement is a disruptive experience, such treatment can be successful. Better than treatment,
however, is prevention.
Families sometimes try to protect the griever by removing the reminders of the
loss. This strategy promotes avoidance by communicating that the pain of dealing with the loss
would be overwhelming; it also hampers normal bereavement by removing important reminders
that trigger painful but necessary memories. Family and friends can help any griever adjust by
encouraging talk about feelings and thoughts about the loss.
Similarly, children do not benefit from being protected from file rituals around
bereavement. Such "protection" may be costly; those old enough to understand death (age 5 or
older) often need tile painful reminders and rituals just as adults do. It is important that children
be allowed to participate in mourning at their own developmental level.
Depending on their ages, children will deal with the loss in a very different
way than adults. Younger children may need to hold "play funerals" for dolls or stuffed animals
and may need to ask questions that may provoke pain in the grieving adults. Older children may
become withdrawn or may begin to act out. For children of all ages, modeling ways to think and
talk about painful feelings can be beneficial.
Bereavement is an experience that must be treated with great respect.
First, family members need to recognize and respect individuals' rights to
grieve in their own way.
Second, respect needs to come from health care professionals. While distress is
inevitable with loss, unresolved grief means that distress can continue without relief unless
effective treatment is begun.
Most people need no formal intervention for bereavement. However, behavior
therapists and other qualified mental health professionals can help guide those dealing with
complicated bereavement through a process of resolution. Such a process can start even years
after a loss; the sooner the process begins, however, the sooner the griever can return to normal
functioning. At Jones-Pearson Funeral Home, Inc., we have trained personnel to assist you
at this most strenuous time. Please do not hesitate to call upon us.
Please contact our Webmaster with questions or
comments.Uncomplicated Bereavement
Complicated Bereavement: Warning Signs
Prevention Issues
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