This workbook focuses on helping readers understand the essential steps they must take to rebuild, recover and renew their lives after a loss from divorce, death, friendships, jobs, pets or moving.
At a lecture, a woman named Meredith shared her story. Meredith's friends were telling her she just wasn't herself— what was going on? She explained that it was the twenty-fifth anniversary of her mother's death.
Through a curation of different forms of art, the "7 Stages of Grief" explores how artists of all mediums experience each stage of grief.
In The Truth About Grief, Ruth Davis Konigsberg shows how the five stages were based on no science but nonetheless became national myth. She explains that current research paints a completely different picture of how we actually grieve.
In this groundbreaking new work, David Kessler—an expert on grief and the coauthor with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross of the iconic On Grief and Grieving—journeys beyond the classic five stages to discover a sixth stage: meaning.
This is “a fitting finale and tribute to the acknowledged expert on end-of-life matters” (Good Housekeeping).
The Prologue for this book summarizes the author's moving love story up until the moment tragedy strikes at the heart of his family.
This book provides compassionate support and creative ways to soothe and transform your emotions with powerful, but simple strategies that: - Promote healing and calm feelings of anxiety, anger, or despair - Alleviate nightmares, intrusive ...
Rees, W. D., and Lutkins, S. G. (1967). Mortality of bereavement. British Medical Journal, 4, 163–164. Relf, M. (1994). The effectiveness of volunteer bereavement support: Reflections from the Sobell House Bereavement Study.
Report on care of terminally ill patients by students of medicine, sociology, psychology and theology growing out of a University of Chicago interdisciplinary seminar.
Short, affordable self-help guide to coping with bereavement.