Divorce Law Guide
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Moving Beyond Grief and Loss
Moving Beyond Grief and Loss
By Garrett
Coan
In my work as a coach and therapist, I have seen many
clients dealing with losses of all kinds—loss of loved ones
through death and divorce, for instance. These experiences are
difficult for everyone.
Stages of Recovery from Loss
There are some predictable stages that most people pass
through after losing something or someone important. In her
work on death and dying, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross outlined five
stages of grieving.
Shock and Denial: The first reaction to loss is often the
inability to feel anything. This may include feeling numb,
weak, overwhelmed, anxious, not yourself, or withdrawn.
Anger: Blaming yourself or others for the loss.
Bargaining: “If you’ll just let him live, I’ll promise to go
to church every Sunday for the rest of my life.”
Depression: Feeling deep sadness, disturbed sleep and eating
patterns, thoughts of suicide, excessive crying.
Acceptance: Beginning to look for the lessons of the
experience.
Kübler-Ross said that the grieving process involves
experiencing all five stages, although not always in this
order. She also said that people often cycle back and forth
through a number of the stages before coming to the stage of
acceptance.
Kinds of Losses
Some examples of significant losses are:
• Loss of a person through death
• Divorce
• Job loss
• Loss of your good health when you are diagnosed with a
disease
• Loss of a body part through accident or surgery
• Loss of an ability, such as blindness
• Loss of a friend who has moved
• Loss of everything familiar when you move away
Each kind of loss affects each person in a different way,
but the recovery process usually follows Kübler-Ross’s five
stages.
Recovering from Loss: Some Key Points
1. You are responsible for your own grief process. No one
can tell you how to grieve, and no one will do your grieving
for you. It is hard work and you must manage the process by
yourself.
2. The grief process has a purpose. It is to help you learn
to accept the reality of the loss and to learn from the
experience.
3. Remind yourself that your grief will end. You will not
feel like this forever. You will heal.
4. Take care of your health. Grief is extremely stressful,
and it requires energy to manage the stress.
5. Be careful with food and drink. While it may be tempting
to numb the pain with food and drink, this can lead to the
additional problems of alcohol dependence and overweight. Also,
numbing the pain means you are prolonging denial. This will
make your grieving process longer.
6. Talk about the person who is no longer in your life.
People sometimes avoid talking about the loss as a denial
mechanism. However, this prolongs denial and the grieving
process.
7. Take time to be alone. In the days and weeks following
the loss of a loved one, there is often a flurry of activity
with many visitors and phone calls. Added to the stress of your
loss, this can be completely exhausting. People will understand
if you don’t answer the phone for an afternoon or go to your
room and close the door for a while.
Don’t make any important decisions until your life feels
more balanced. It can be tempting to make some important change
right after a major loss as an effort to feel more in
control.
8. Maintain a normal routine if you can. You have enough
changes in your life right now. Try to get up in the morning,
go to bed at night, and take your meals at the same times you
usually do.
9. Ask for help. You will need it. If you don’t want to be
alone, or if you want someone to take you somewhere, it is okay
to ask. People don’t expect you to be self-sufficient right
now.
10. Let people help you. People want to help because it
gives them a way to express their feelings. Staying connected
with people is especially important now, and accepting help is
a way of staying connected.
11. Keep a journal of your feelings and experiences during
the grief process. Writing about your feelings helps you
express them, rather than keeping them inside. It also gives
you something to remember and review in the future, which you
will appreciate.
Writing about your feelings helps you express them, rather
than keeping them inside.
12. Avoid making extreme life changes after a major loss.
Don’t make any important decisions until your life feels more
balanced. It can be tempting to make some important changes
right after a major loss as an effort to feel more in control.
If you can, put off such changes and decisions until later.
13. Don’t hurry your grief process. People sometimes want to
put their feelings and memories behind them because they are
painful. But grieving takes time, and there are no
shortcuts.
14. Remind yourself that although grief hurts, it will not
harm you. Grief is painful, but you will survive and even grow
from the experience.
15. Expect to regress in your recovery process from time to
time. This is normal. It may happen unexpectedly, but it
probably won’t last long.
16. Acknowledge the anniversary of your loss by taking the
day off or doing something special. Have supportive people
ready to be with you. It could be a difficult day and it’s
better not to be alone.
How to Help Someone Who Is Grieving
1. Don’t try to get them to feel or be anything but what
they are.
2. Don’t reward them for acting cheerful or “like your old
self.” This teaches them to suppress their feelings around
you.
3. Don’t avoid them. They need your support.
4. Let them tell about the loss again and again, if they
need to.
5. Recognize that unexpected, perhaps inappropriate behavior
is part of the grieving process. It means the bereaved person
is moving forward.
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