Understanding Mourning: A Guide for Those who Grieve

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Augsburg Books, 1 de jan. de 1984 - 110 páginas
Dr. Davidson offers the latest findings and most helpful guidelines for healthy mourning and return to a reorganized life.

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Conteúdo

Telling Your Story
9
Using the Concept of Disease to Tell Your Story
21
Using the Concept of Feelings to Tell Your Story
29
Using the Concept of Faith to Tell Your Story
39
When Mourning Is Shock and Numbness
49
When Mourning Is Searching and Yearning
57
When Mourning Is Disorganization and Depression
67
When Mourning Is Almost Over
77
Models for Helping Mourners
85
Mourning Becomes Compassion
93
Notes
99
For Further Reading
102
Directory of Organizations
105
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Página 40 - For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven : a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted...
Página 100 - Arnold Van Gennep, The Rites of Passage, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1960.
Página 42 - ... changed in an instant, as quickly as the blinking of an eye. For when the trumpet sounds, the dead will be raised, never to die again, and we shall all be changed. For what is mortal must be changed into what is immortal; what will die must be changed into what cannot die. So when this takes place... then the scripture will come true: Death is destroyed; victory is complete!
Página 100 - H. Richard Niebuhr, Radical Monotheism and Western Culture (New York: Harper and Row, 1960), esp.
Página 2 - Blessed are those who mourn ,for they shall be comforted.
Página 101 - Chapter 6 1. Karl Menninger, Whatever Became of Sin? (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1973). Chapter 7 1. EH Volkart, "Bereavement and Mental Health," in Explorations in Social Psychiatry, AJ Leighton, JA Clausen, and RN Wilson, eds.
Página 13 - ... together. By telling your story you will discover that your facts change, not because the facts themselves are changed but because your choice of what is important changes. You may discover that your initial impressions of what happened were incomplete or even inaccurate. The more unexpected the death, the more likely it is that initial impressions were wrong.

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