Saturday, June 30, 2012

What Do I Say When Someone Dies?

We've all been there, you've just heard the news that your friend has lost a loved one close to them, but what do you say?

Here's a few tips to avoid the common mistakes that people make when friends are grieving.

Grief Loss

Say Something! - some people are so worried about saying the wrong thing that they say nothing at all - this is even worse than saying something that you feel isn't helpful. Offer To Help - it doesn't have to be much - just taking round a meal to someone who's grieving can help. It shows that you care and helps them to feel cared for and supported. Send A Card - even if you know they've received dozens or hundreds of cards, it's important to send one. It shows that you are thinking of them and lets them know that you've heard their news. Keep In Touch - what's even worse than losing a loved one is when all the people you thought were your friends are too embarrassed or awkward to keep in contact. Make regular phone calls (put it in the diary if need be) or invite them round for a meal from time to time. Offer Practical Help - it might be something as simple as mowing the lawn, driving to the shops - but it can help to take the sting out of those "firsts" that you have to do without your loved one. Remember Holidays & Occasions - these can be really tough. Whether it's Christmas, birthdays or anniversaries (including the anniversary of their death), people who have been seemingly strong can crumble as they have to face their loss all over again. and finally, Listen! - it may not be rational, sensible or coherent - but listening with a sympathetic ear (without offering suggestions or answers!) to someone who is on an emotional rollercoaster can be helpful. It can help move them on through the difficult process of grieving and is a sign of true friendship.

What Do I Say When Someone Dies?

Mother Theresa captured it well when she said "Loneliness and the feeling of being unwanted is the worst poverty of all". She described it as the leprosy of the West.

Simply by bucking the trend, stepping out of our comfort zones and choosing to be there with our friend through their grief you can make a significant difference.

What Do I Say When Someone Dies?

Jen Carter runs the Special Moments site which offers information on funerals & planning. You can find 50 best-loved funeral poems and readings [http://www.specialmomentshome.com/funeral/funeral-poems.html] at her website. You can find more funeral and memorial poems at Poem4Today.

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Loss and Grief Counseling Skills

GOALS OF GRIEF COUNSELING

The primary goal of grief counseling is to deal with the seven most painful feelings; everything else is a derivative of them. Every other painful feeling can be related to those. For example, anger is at the root of resentment and frustration, fear is the source of anxiety and insecurity, and emptiness gives rise to abandonment and loneliness. Shame is a combination of fear and guilt. It's a fear about what other people may think if they knew.

Grief Loss

There are three goals in grief counseling. The first and fundamental goal is to identify and experience the range and intensity of painful feelings that make up grief. We're going to help the client to identify the feelings cognitively, and then to experience the full range from fear to despair as well as the intensity of the painful feelings related to his loss, or losses.

Loss and Grief Counseling Skills

The second goal is to identify changes or maladaptive behaviour decisions which are related to the loss. This goal is very important in cases of complicated loss, which occurs when the painful feelings have not been dealt with in a healthy way. Instead of being expressed and shared, they've been defended against and protected, resulting in unhealthy or maladapted behaviours. By maladaptive we mean ineffective or unworkable or unhealthy behaviour decisions. When we see these behaviours continuing over years, over a long period of time, then we're seeing this as a complicated bereavement experience of our client.

"Decisions" is an interesting word because the behaviour choices, or ways of coping with the pain, are often done unintentionally or unconsciously, but they are decisions nonetheless. A person can re-decide, can make different decisions about that pain and how to cope with it, how to deal with it.

The third goal of grief counseling is to complete unfinished business, and to say goodbye in order to say hello. It's difficult to say hello to new life experiences until we say goodbye to old painful ones, and by goodbye we mean letting go. Saying goodbye, and letting go, and learning acceptance, which is a commonly used term, all mean the same thing.

Saying goodbye really encompasses all three objectives for grief counseling. A person hasn't completely grieved, or said goodbye, or let go, until he has worked through the pain, identified and changed the behaviour decisions, and finished his unfinished business.

You can see that these goals correspond to the counseling process as we've been discussing it. It's simply a reiteration of what we've been talking about. As we're discussing loss and grief, I'd like for you to be thinking about your own losses. These could be deaths of loved ones, break-up of relationships, loss of parental caring and relationships are the major ones, the most difficult ones.

Once you've identified a loss and the person can express the sadness, how often do you go back to that loss? Maybe you think a person could experience those feelings surrounding a loss indefinitely just by putting himself back in that place again. How do you know when enough is enough?

There are two different views. The cognitive school says you don't really get rid of the pain, you just know all about it. You become so familiar with it that it no longer has power over you. And the only way to know all about it is to experience it. There's no other way. So there is a point at which cognitive therapy has to include grieving, otherwise there's no true knowledge of the pain.

The other school of thought which is represented, for example, by people who use psychodrama a lot, is that when you express the pain it's possible to release it, and to purge yourself of it. It may take a long time for that catharsis to be complete, but eventually the pain will be completely gone.

I tend to think it's a combination of both. There is a catharsis effect, and some of the pain is released, but then there is also the cognitive aspect of knowing about the intensity of the pain, that takes the power away from it. I'm no longer frightened of the pain. I know about it and I've accepted it as mine, and as okay. I have embraced the pain.

INTERVENTIONS FOR THE EMOTIONS OF GRIEF

Now let's go on to looking at the painful feelings. The first goal of grief counseling is to identify and experience the range and intensity of painful feelings. It's going to be important for us to review these feelings and to suggest some therapeutic interventions for working with the grieving person. We also need to realize what the fear of painful feelings is about.

Imagine a successful executive of a corporation who has never experienced any tragedy in his life, any major loss. He has a wife and three kids and he gets a phone call that one of his children, a six or seven year old child, has just been hit by a truck and killed in front of the house. The child came home from school and crossed the road in front of a gravel truck coming from a nearby construction site, and was killed. Now this man has a lot of responsibility to provide for his family and to keep his company going, and since he has experienced a tragic loss he goes for counseling. It's very difficult for him to engage his pain, because he's afraid of what?

He's afraid of falling apart and of not being able to get on with all of the things he has to do. He needs to maintain the image of the corporate person. And he's been working on being able to do this for many years and to continue with his heavy responsibilities. So not having experienced intense grief before, he doesn't know that it's not going to cause him to fall apart.

In fact he doesn't realize that if he doesn't allow himself to grieve, then he's going to fall apart. It's going to be just the opposite of what he's afraid of. So we need to help that person get past the fear, and the way to do that is to encourage him to talk about the fear, to validate the fear, to reflect how scary it may be, and then invite him just to say a little bit about it.

Fear

I find this is a very effective approach when working with the very blocked, resistant client: invite him to say just a little bit about the little bit of fear that he may have. And once he feels supported with that, then he can go on to another painful feeling.

A gradual approach to the feared object is fundamental to working with fear. Remember that whenever there is fear, there is resistance, defenses. So it is important to go slowly, invite the person to say what the fear is about and after he has disclosed, ask him what it was like to talk about that. Then invite him to say a little more.

Whenever, there is disclosure of difficult, painful experience, be sure to process the process by saying, "What was it like talking about that? Is it OK?" This allows the client to control the pace and amount of disclosure and to validate the process and to maintain his sense of safety.

Sometimes the fear is about feeling so much of the pain, he will become depressed or so sad that he will never stop crying. So we can say, "I wonder if you are afraid that if you start crying you may never stop, and you will fill the whole world with your tears." This can free up the sadness, and he will discover that the crying does end and he survived it. This will help the healing, and life will be easier and less sad.

Anger

Some grieving people find it easier to access anger than their sadness. They'll use their anger to defend against their sadness. They feel strong with anger but weak and vulnerable with sadness. Generally the person who finds it easier to access anger in grief has an aggressive personality. They are usually outspoken, direct, and opinionated. In working with the very angry, grieving client, we can validate that anger for as long as he needs it to be validated. Draw it out and encourage him to express it, entitle him to that anger.

If we're able to validate or support a person's anger, what feeling comes next? The sadness will come out more easily if the anger has been properly supported. Now with the passive individual, who accesses sadness more easily, we need to help him express the anger. The passive individual feels guilty about anger and is afraid of its destructiveness. So to reach for anger we can use the word "cheated," or another word that the person feels safer with.

So we can say, "I wonder if you feel a little cheated? Your husband has died, you expected you'd be able to retire together, you were looking forward to that. And now he's gone. I wonder if you feel just a little bit cheated about that?" And sometimes what I find is that if I minimize a feeling and use the word cheated with that individual, she'll maximize and say, "Yes, I feel really cheated." And I'll say, "Go on and say more about being cheated." In fact she is talking about her anger, but she is just not using that word.

Try to find words that don't offend the client or that don't trigger the guilt or fear around anger. Try to use other approaches and other words. Here are some other approaches.

You can say things like, "What are some 'why' questions? If you were to ask 'why' questions about the death of your father, or the death or your child, what would they be?" What are some of those 'why' questions? Why did you die? Why him? Why did he leave me? Why not me? Why did God let this happen? Often the anger is directed at God. So then I'll say, "What's the feeling that goes with that why question? Fear, anger, guilt, sadness, emptiness?"

If it was a child the client may ask why a child died. Why not an older person? Why not someone who'd lived a full life? Why a child? Anger is what goes with that question; the outrage, the sense of injustice, the unfairness. Sometimes your client will come up with anger. Then you can invite him to say more about the anger. And you can validate it, support it.

Another thing we can do is say, "Talk about the lost hopes and dreams." Lost hopes and dreams are about being cheated because those hopes and dreams can't be fulfilled now that this death and this loss has occurred. There's a sense of feeling cheated about that. Another thing I may do to draw anger is to design a statement for my client to repeat. I may design a why question or a blaming statement.

For example in the case of an abusive parent, in working with loss of parental caring and closeness, I may suggest the statement, "You didn't care about anyone but yourself. You didn't care about me, all you cared about was the bottle." Try on that statement. I may say it without any affect in my voice.

You can tailor a statement, invite your client to repeat it, and then reach for a feeling. "What's it like saying that? Does that fit? What feelings come up when you say that? What choice words do you have for this man?" Go for choice words or strong words, if your client has them in his vocabulary. For the type of client that has choice words available to him, ask him what some choice words may be. The passive client may not have choice words in his vocabulary. Some of these words could possibly be very coarse and powerful.

We are facilitating the expression of emotion through name-calling, I'm talking here about the client who has been severely abused, mistreated. We need to have a way to vent that anger in a therapeutic setting, not face to face with the abuser. So you don't really want to escalate it but you want to allow this person to feel that it's okay to feel angry.

Sometimes anger is directed toward the counselor as a defense. When a client becomes very resistant and begins to struggle with the counselor, we can say, "So I wonder if hanging on to the struggle is a way of not getting on with your healing." When he acknowledges this, direct him, "Now talk about what's behind the struggle, talk about what's hard to talk about, what's hard to face."

Sadness

When I'm starting to bring out anger and sadness with a client, I may also say, "I wonder if you're using that anger to defend against another feeling." Or "I wonder if that anger is easier than the sadness." Or if a client identifies both anger and sadness I'll say, "Which of those two feelings is easier for you to express?"

She may have identified anger as a primary feeling, and I may reach for a little sadness. She may have owned a little sadness, and then I would say, "Which one is easier for you to feel?" And whichever one she chooses I'll invite her to talk about the opposite one because it's the one she doesn't want to talk about that needs to be worked through. The key to a person's progress is to invite him to explore and integrate whatever is most difficult.

Other ways to get to sadness is to say the following:

"Say his name." The name of the loved one may be loaded with sadness and remains unspoken until you invite it.

"Talk about a happy memory." The happy memory brings up a sense of loss and sadness.

"Talk about the last time you saw him." The last memory may be of the death or of regrets and sadness about this.

"What do you see as your talk? It's as if you are looking at something." Tapping into mental images may be associated with sadness because the past is being re-lived in the present.

"You will never see his face again." The realization about the finality of the death is often very sad but true.

"Have you said good-bye to him?" This brings up sadness about the finality of the loss and can be key to letting go.

While observing the client's emotional response, take note of keywords and phrases immediately preceding the sadness, then repeat these words at an opportune time to facilitate grief. For example, a client grieves when describing how her son was killed by a "power truck." Later, I simply said, "There was a power truck," and the client cried.

Remember to always process the process after a client has finished crying, by saying, "What's its like talking about this and feeling these things? Is it OK to cry?" And if she says it hurts so much say, "It's normal to feel that with what you've been through. You loved him."

Guilt

Guilt is one of the primary reasons that people develop very maladaptive behaviours. A person who feels very guilty doesn't believe that he deserves happiness, and so what does he think he think he deserves? Punishment. Punishment goes with guilt, so I may want to explore with the person how much guilt he feels? Maybe a little bit, a lot? This is the same technique I may use exploring any feeling. How much anger do you feel? A little bit, a lot, a medium amount? I want to gauge how much of that feeling they are aware of inside.

If they feel a lot of guilt, or they identify a feeling of guilt I'm going to say, "I wonder if you're aware of how you may be punishing yourself."

And then I'll say what some people do. "Sometimes when people feel guilty they won't let themselves be happy, they'll be depressed, they'll be stuck in their life. They won't let themselves get on with their life. They won't let themselves experience enjoyment, they won't let themselves be close to people, they won't let themselves really welcome the challenges and opportunities that life has to offer. And I wonder if you're aware of how you may be punishing yourself in some small way?"

A helpful approach is to use exaggeration: "I wonder if you will give yourself a life sentence." When the client considers this, they have a chance to realize what he may have done and decide to let go of the self-punishment. "What will you do differently? Can you let go of that?" and "What would (your loved one) say?"

Use of minimizing and exaggeration

So again use that minimizing technique, because it's easier for people to think of small ways sometimes and then that opens up other areas of awareness. So a person will choose and then I'll say, "I wonder if you're going to give yourself a life sentence?" That's making use of exaggeration. In other words, take that metaphor to its ultimate conclusion, or to it's extreme, which could be something like a life sentence of punishment by means of depression. For example, I had a client who lived a rebellious life, and then his mother suddenly died of a heart attack. He blamed himself for his mother's death and he became chronically depressed after that for a number of years. When I saw him in treatment I explored the guilt with him, and I said, "I wonder how you may punish yourself? I wonder if maybe depression is a way you may do that?" And he acknowledged it. And he went on saying that he didn't deserve to be happy. He felt that his life style was a cause of his mother's death. And so I said, "I wonder if you're going to give yourself a life sentence?" And he stopped and the wheels were turning and he made a new decision. He pulled back from the guilt.

With the extreme conclusion or exaggeration intervention, a person will pull back from the exaggerated possibility. He'll say, "No, I'm not going to take it to that extent." This client started making real changes, real improvements in his direction. When people feel really guilty, they won't allow themselves to get on with their grieving. They'll remain stuck in it, and that's their unconscious form of punishment.

Hanging on or letting go

Sometimes people won't let themselves work through their sadness and their anger, or other painful feelings, because hanging on to the guilt is a way of hanging on to the person who died. Sometimes I'll put it to a client that way. I'll say, "I wonder if hanging on to that guilt may be a way of hanging on to Mom?" And some times they don't realize it, they haven't thought of it in those terms. When you put it that way it helps them to decide not to hang on.

I've heard clients say that: "I don't want to hang on any more." That implies letting go of the guilt. You can use that with anger: "I wonder if hanging on to that anger is a way of hanging on to the man you divorced? Hanging on to the fight may be a way of hanging on to your ex-husband. Hanging on to the fight may be a way of hanging on to Dad."

You can move people forward by saying, "It's not easy to let go. It's not something you need to hurry." What you often hear is, "How do you let go?" and I say, "By doing exactly what you're doing today. Talking about your feelings, putting it into words, by doing exactly what you're doing and I encourage you to keep doing that. What's it like doing that today, talking about your pain?" And they'll say, "It's tough."

I mentioned earlier that some people use anger to cover sadness and others use sadness to cover anger. So sadness is not necessarily the core feeling, although often for the person who's very angry, it's important for him to get to his sadness.

For the person who's very sad, especially if he appears to be stuck in sadness over a long period of time, weeks, months, or maybe years, maybe it's because it's because he hasn't dealt with the anger, or he hasn't dealt with the guilt, or both.

Emptiness

So then we come to emptiness. Emptiness is something a person may feel constantly. But sometimes a person will fill the emptiness, or attempt to fill that empty feeling or that void with the other painful feelings. It's easier to feel anger than that agonizing emptiness or that sense of the void, that abandonment, that loneliness.

Sometimes, early on in grief counseling, that person may identify feeling empty, and the way I may work with that is to say, "What goes into that emptiness? Would it be empty sad, empty angry, empty frightened, empty guilty, empty what?" I'll associate another feeling with the emptiness.

And I may work with the emptiness on its own, and just invite the person to talk about the emptiness. She may talk about a loved one she lost, who had been in her life at the dinner table, or in bed beside her if it's a partner, a spouse. The spouse came to the door at the same time on schedule for so many years, and now that person is gone and so there are empty spaces at the table, in the bedroom, at the door.

When a child dies there is tremendous emptiness because that child has occupied so much of the parents' time, and has contributed so much to the noise level. The child leaves a deafening silence that's very agonizing. We need to help a person identify what the emptiness is about and then validate that.

Now the emptiness may become more apparent to a person as she gets support and is able to put these other painful feelings, the anger or sadness, into words. As she's letting go of that anger or sadness, the emptiness may still be there and it may be even more obvious to the person. And most especially, I find that clients report feeling empty when I invite them to talk about letting go or saying goodbye to the loved one.

For example, I sometimes use the empty chair to invite a person to talk to a loved one about saying goodbye, and I then explore the feelings that he's left with. I say, "What's it like, what are you feeling inside as you say goodbye and as you talk about saying goodbye to your father or your child? What feelings come up? Fear, anger, guilt, emptiness, despair?" And nine times out of ten they choose emptiness because that's what's left if you're going to say goodbye to somebody.

Now if a person has done a fair amount of grieving, I'll work with that emptiness in a therapeutic way by saying, "Maybe you're at a kind of crossroads in your grief. You can either fill that emptiness with the old pain, your old ways of being stuck and not getting on with your life, not letting yourself be close to other people, or you can begin to fill that emptiness with the challenges that life has to offer, taking risks to get close, allowing yourself to enjoy pleasurable experiences in life. Which way do you think you'll go on this crossroad?"

That's a cognitive technique that allows clients to make a conscious decision about what they're going to do or which way they're going to go. This is transition toward reconstruction of life and saying hello to new people and experiences.

Seeing the hidden loss

If there was emotional distance, a loss of bonding, or if the lost person was experienced as angry, the grief may be buried and be more about the loss of closeness when the person was alive or prior to the loss.

A woman married a man who disclosed to her after two or three years of marriage that he was homosexual, and then he ended the relationship. She didn't appear to go through any grieving process at all when it actually ended. She went back to work the next day and two months later she met another man. She got married and had kids, and I'm not aware of her going through much grief. Why? Because the marriage was the loss not the ending of the marriage. She grieved when she first learned he was gay; she was angry, sad; felt guilt, low self-worth, emptiness.

Grief will only be experienced as an intense kind of experience if there's been bonding. If there hasn't been significant emotional bonding, it's not as much of a loss. If he was homosexual it's understandable that there may not have been much intimacy, or closeness, or bonding. It may have been some other kind of relationship, more like a brother and sister rather than husband and wife. So it has to do with how much is invested.

A woman came up to me after a talk I had given and said that when her mother died she didn't grieve. And she wanted to know why, because other people grieve. She wondered why she wasn't upset. I asked her, "Were you close to your mother?" and she said "No." She had never been close all those years. And I said, "I wonder what feelings come up inside you when you think about all those years of not being close to your mother?" That's when the tears welled up in her eyes. That's what her grief was about. It wasn't about her mother's death. It was about the loss of closeness during her lifetime.

Low self-worth

A person may feel low self-worth, especially if he is experiencing feelings of guilt, because when a person feels very guilty he doesn't feel worthwhile, he doesn't feel he deserves to go on living.

A person may also experience low self-worth if he comes from a dysfunctional family and now has experienced a tragic death of a loved one. He may feel as though he didn't really deserve to have that person be alive for him. Low self-worth sometimes happens when people bargain, for example with God, over the life of the person who died. So you may hear about a person saying, "I'm really the one who should die. Don't let that child die. Take me, God." So in that kind of bargaining the implied message is, "I'm not as worthwhile as the child." A person may then become very depressed, and isolate or deprive himself of enjoyment in life because he doesn't feel worthwhile or deserving.

In cases of sexual abuse, low self-worth is connected to shame or to feeling dirty. What do you do with something if it's dirty or worthless? You throw it away. That's another kind of loss that we haven't yet talked about. Sexual abuse and assault is a very significant loss. Feeling dirty or feeling shame is closely related to that and leads to self-abuse by choosing unhealthy relationships and lifestyle or behaviours that distance from others, such as obesity or aggression.

Despair

Despair and hopelessness are the sum total of these other painful feelings, and as a person is engaging in the grief process and getting support and validation, often that despair will diminish. The despair may appear early on along with fear, but as the safety of the counseling relationship increases and the therapeutic alliance improves, despair sometimes diminishes along with the fear.

Despair often goes with confusion. A person may have a lot of painful feelings inside that he hasn't identified, especially early in the grief process. He feels despair because he has the intensity of all that pain but he hasn't been able to sort it out. So as you work with him throughout the process and identify the distinct feelings and help him work through them, the confusion and the despair diminish.

Prior loss affecting a current loss

If a person has suffered significant losses throughout her lifetime, is the coping process easier for her? It depends on how she has dealt with those previous losses. If she has coped with her previous losses in an unhealthy way by burying feelings, or by dumping feelings, or by distancing herself from others, that can become a pattern.

For example, some people won't say goodbye; they'll just leave and you'll wonder where they went. And it may be that that's related to their style of hanging on or their style of dealing with loss and separation from an earlier experience in life. Sometimes when a person experiences a tragic loss it will bring up their previous losses. And if there seems to be difficulty establishing and maintaining intimate relationships and getting on with life goals, it may be due to unfinished business with a previous loss.

Loss and Grief Counseling Skills

Daniel Keeran, MSW, has been a professional counselor and therapist for 30 years. He has provided counseling and training to thousands of professionals and the public through his private practice, seminars, and online training courses. To order the best-selling training manual "Effective Counseling Skills" go to http://tinyurl.com/yen574x

An online Grief Counseling Theory and Skills Course is available at http://www.counseling-skills.com

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

For the New Widow: Ten Tips To Help Her Survive...After the Funeral

You're home now. A short while ago you stood over a hole in the earth. You blew a kiss, tossed a rose, sprinkled a shovelful of dirt over a casket, and said goodbye to your husband, your soul mate, the best friend you ever had.

As you move about greeting hungry strangers, someone whispers that the woman wandering about with mayonnaise on her chin is your mother's sister's next door neighbor's cousin's dog's pet sitter. It is a scene right out of Star Wars, the one in the bar, and you feel trapped in it. In a little while everyone is gone, even the dirty-faced dog walker. The door shuts and reality sets in. He isn't coming home. Ever. And in those early days after the funeral, performing the simplest of tasks will seem monumental. You will wonder can I make it - Without Him?

Grief Loss

You can. And you will.

For the New Widow: Ten Tips To Help Her Survive...After the Funeral

Here are ten tips to help you survive...after the funeral:

1. Do say yes to a friend, close relative, or good neighbor, who offers to spend the night (or more), while you slip into something uncomfortable - Widowhood.

Don't be alone that first night, not unless you don't have a choice. First nights without Him sting like a bee and an angel to sit quietly at your kitchen table, to turn out the lights, to shut off the cell phone, and to prepare a cup of tea while you tuck the children in bed, walk the dog, feed the cat, is like aloe on sunburn.

2. Do carry a small notebook. And pen.

Take them with you everywhere you go, even to the bathroom. New widows run out of toothpaste, toilet paper, tissues, ear swabs, and lipstick. And they forget. If your pen and notebook is handy, you won't forget to write the item down. You won't forget to buy it. You will teach yourself structure and focus, something every new widow needs. And running an errand will get you out of the house.

3. Do learn your financial status.

As soon as practical, make an appointment with your accountant, your attorney, and your broker. Bundle your papers, bank statements, insurance policies, will, and outstanding bills. Review them before your appointment. Got questions? Write them down - In that little notebook, remember? The one in your purse.

Don't be afraid to ask questions. You are a new widow, and there is no such thing as a "silly" question. As a matter of fact bury that "silly" word. You're in charge now. Information is crucial to your survival. And for pity sakes, if you don't know how to balance a checkbook, ask.

4. Do pay the mortgage. And the electric.

Other bills may be postponed, temporarily, but not these two. You can lie down and wish your world to go away after you've written these two checks and recorded the data in your check register, or that little notebook, the one in your purse. Don't forget to stick a stamp on the envelopes. Don't forget to mail them. Again, it'll give you a reason to leave the house.

5. Do take care of yourself - Comb your hair, wash your face, brush your teeth, apply lipstick - Do it everyday. Even if you don't leave the house.

Don't get a haircut. This is not the time. Not unless you've got a standing appointment and feel comfortable sitting in a chair for any amount of time. On the long list of things that'll make a new widow feel worse, a bad hair day for the next six months rockets to the top. I suggest delaying a hair cut for at least three months. If you find your hair really scraggly, make a ponytail and tie a ribbon in it. What? No ribbon? What's that pink thing on that basket of fruit?

6. Do take care of your children.

If you have small children, don't neglect them. They need you. Feed them, even if it's cold cereal. Wash their clothes and their faces. Remind them gently to brush their teeth. Don't be afraid to hold them and hug them. Do tell them, everything will be alright.

7. Do walk the dog.
Do change the cat's litter.
Do make certain that all house pets are fed and that they have access to fresh water. It's not unkind to fill a sink with tap water or to leave the toilet seat up. Just remember to flush.

Don't get mad when Barky has an accident, when Kitty claws the carpet, or if they chase each other's tails. Pets mourn, too. Watch for behavior that may require a trip to the vet.

8. Do take out the trash.

Don't wait until the kitchen stinks of spoiled chopped meat and sour milk. No excuse if you live alone. Put on a robe and take out the trash. A family of creepy crawly things is the last thing you want for company.

9. Do eat. Not hungry? Drink water. Keep yourself hydrated.

Don't drink alcohol. Not even one beer. Even if you have always had one glass of wine with dinner, don't do it. At least temporarily. And if you never drank before, don't start now.

10. Do cry.

Tears are cleansing and will help wash away your pain. The only way to process grief is to go through it, not around it, not under it, and not over it. That means crying. So don't be afraid to let it out. Don't be afraid to ask for help, to call a doctor, a psychologist, a grief counselor. Don't be afraid to join a bereavement group. A new widow needs to get out of the house. She needs structure. She needs support. And more important, she needs to know she is not alone.

Life won't be the same without Him. That's for sure. But after the funeral, following these tips will aid you, the new widow, as you develop coping mechanisms, focus, and strategies to help you help yourself as you make your way through the early stages of grief.

For the New Widow: Ten Tips To Help Her Survive...After the Funeral

Linda Della Donna is a freelance writer. A graduate of the Institute of Children's Literature, Linda writes for children, parents, and widows. She makes her home in a suburb of Westchester, NY with her small dog, Izzy, and his little cat, Tux. You can learn more about Linda by visiting her web site, http://www.littleredmailbox.com and reading her blog at http://griefcase.blogspot.com

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Monday, June 18, 2012

Ambiguous Losses that Bring Unresolved and Ongoing Grief

Ambiguous losses are shrouded in uncertainty, seem to go on forever, and show no signs of ending. They are much more prevalent than the general public realizes, and cause much confusion for would be caregivers who try to provide support for the bereaved.

The first type of ambiguous loss involves uncertainty with regard to whether the person involved has actually died (in cases of suspected suicide, was it an accident or?). Someone falls off a cruise liner at sea. A soldier is reported missing in action in a war zone. A child disappears without a trace. An adult is missing in a mountain climbing accident. Is the person still alive or have they died? Can survivors ever find out?

Grief Loss

The second type of ambiguous loss is of a psychological nature. As a former consultant to an Alcohol Referral Service, there were many families who had absentee alcoholic fathers or mothers, even though both parents were living under the same roof. There was always uncertainty when the person would be home and in what condition. Addictions to various drugs bring sadness and long term grief for family members.

Ambiguous Losses that Bring Unresolved and Ongoing Grief

Alzheimer's disease and comas induced by accidents are other examples of physical presence but uncertainty as to the actions or lack action of the persons who are ill. Divorce and remarriage, as well as immigration, heavily blur family lines and are additional uncertainty examples. It will be helpful in dealing with these losses to be aware of the following.

1. Ambiguous losses have an immense devastating impact on those who suffer through the uncertainty, and cause what appears to be never ending pain, confusion, and sadness. Trying to understand the dilemma from the point of view of the mourner is critical to providing the best support possible.

2. Troubling emotions and physical stress is ever present, since the usual predictable and assuring factors that bring some sense of security or knowing, are absent. Frequent anti-stress measures such as walking, yoga, soft music, and massage are critically important in managing any type of ambiguous loss. Diversions are essential as mourners are easily immobilized, and become stuck in their grief.

3. Social dislocation and perceptual differences in viewing the loss is common. For example, children of a family who have been deserted by a parent may feel different toward that parent or have an opposite view of the remaining parent who is still in the home. In other families with a missing member, one person may feel the person who has not been found has died, while another holds out hope that the person will be found alive.

4. Working your way out of ambiguity is no simple task when you are thinking one minute the person may be alive and the next dead. Hope and hopelessness come and go and often support of others is incomplete or nonexistent because there is no certainty that the loss is real. Depression and high anxiety are common. And, psychological loss of a person (alcohol or crack addiction, divorce, etc.) can be every bit as damaging as physical absence. Who is or is not part of my family, is a haunting question for many.

5. If you are dealing with ambiguous loss of any type, find professional assistance. There are counselors who have much expertise in this area, and can help you sort out feelings, and look at the pros and cons of taking specific actions depending on the nature of the loss. Discover the ways others have dealt with uncertain losses, take and use what rings true for you, and let the rest go for the present time.

6. If you are a friend of someone dealing with ambiguous loss, here's how you can help. First, be infinitely patient and nonjudgmental. You cannot begin to imagine the gnawing, ongoing inner turmoil that uncertain loss generates. Your presence and confidence in the person to be able to live with this loss will provide the powerful reassurance that is so desperately needed. The person or family will find a way, but never imply there is something wrong with them for not moving on as you may feel they should.

New ways of looking at the world are needed and mourners can find highly individual coping strategies to deal with uncertainty. You can be a sounding board. Support their efforts. Encourage professional input, and make clear they will find a way that works for them. Equally important, encourage social interaction and relying on their spiritual traditions.

7. Most important of all push the crucial need for open communication among all family members. Having had two divorces within my own family, this is not always easy to do. Yet, airing differences with patience and respect, coupled with complete disclosure, can be most helpful especially for the children. Recognize that as the months and years go by symbolic remembrances are important, bouts of loneliness will be common, reevaluation of relationships can be useful, and the resiliency of most will be evident.

In summary, uncertain loss is a major source of continuous grief and pain, and is much more prevalent than is normally recognized. It can be lived with, but much input is needed from professional sources, and researchers who have found successful strategies. Do a Google search on ambiguous loss to start your education.

And, above all, if you are mourning an ambiguous loss, find a counselor or a support group who can provide the confidence needed to deal with the devastating long-term effects. This counselor can also provide a valuable service in helping you find meaning in your loss so you will be able to live with uncertainty. Changing your perception of any event, that is reframing it, can prove to be a highly successful coping strategy.

Ambiguous Losses that Bring Unresolved and Ongoing Grief

Dr. LaGrand is a grief counselor and the author of eight books, the most recent, the popular Love Lives On: Learning from the Extraordinary Encounters of the Bereaved. He is known world-wide for his research on the Extraordinary Experiences of the bereaved (after-death communication phenomena) and is one of the founders of Hospice of the St. Lawrence Valley, Inc. His free monthly ezine website is http://www.extraordinarygriefexperiences.com

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Saturday, June 16, 2012

Why It's Okay to Talk to a Deceased Loved One

Is it a bit unusual to have a conversation with a deceased loved one? Do many people do this? And are there any benefits to such action? What will my friends think if they find out? These questions are not uncommon in the thoughts of those mourning the death of a loved one.

Briefly, talking to someone who has died is common for many. There are a considerable number of people who pray and talk to their deceased loved ones on a regular basis. And no, it is not at all unusual since the practice has a long history. In fact, some Christian denominations believe in the doctrine of the Communion of Saints. This involves the belief that deceased loved ones who are in heaven are able to intercede to God for those on earth.

Grief Loss

As for your friends and what they might think, I would suggest that is the least of all things to worry about. That is their problem, not yours. Of course, you don't have to tell them anyway. I say all of this because I recommend to most of the people in my support groups to talk to the loved one whenever they feel it is needed. Why? Because it is obviously very beneficial. Here's seven reasons why the practice is useful in dealing with transition.

Why It's Okay to Talk to a Deceased Loved One

1. It provides comfort in transition. For many people who talk to their deceased loved one the action itself is comforting. They are doing something that eases the burden of accepting the fact that the loved one is not physically present.

2. It gives motivation to work to adjust to a new world. Having a real or imaginary conversation with a loved one, when dealing with massive change, may provide the extra push to deal with a difficult problem. If you believe your loved one can hear you, then ask for help in tackling the problem--see what pops into your mind after asking a question. If you don't believe your talk is heard, but is simply using your imagination, then after asking a question imagine what your loved one might say in response.

3. It is a way to demonstrate loving in separation. Talking out loud or silently to your loved one is another example of loving in separation through remembrance. He/she is always a thought away in your heart and it may well be an important way for you to remind yourself that love never dies and you will always have a relationship though separated. There is nothing untoward with honoring the dead every day in this way, if you are so inclined.

4. It can be used it as a wake-up ritual. Rituals, whether formal or informal, can provide a major way of establishing priorities or new routines when coping with loss. They are also a way of honoring the deceased. Starting the day off, as many survivors do, with greetings or remembrance to the deceased before getting into the hustle and bustle of the day, is a hopeful way to begin your day.

5. It is an effective emotional release. Many widows speak to their deceased husbands to express feelings. This action is not only mentally and physically appropriate but it allows a freedom of expression not often found when interacting with others. "It makes me feel he's still around" said one mourner.

6. It can bolster confidence. "I feel better" said one woman after speaking to her deceased loved one. Others suggest a talk can diminish the feeling of being alone. Still others use a conversation to ask for a sign that the loved one is okay in another existence.

7. It gives peace to be able to tell a loved one when something happens. When living alone, many widows talk to the deceased loved one, especially in the evenings when in need of companionship. Do what you feel comfortable with and that gives peace of mind, which is a major factor in evaluating the awareness and use of mystery in a world steeped in "seeing is believing."

Because we live in a world designed to keep the spiritual and the soulful on the periphery, does not mean that we cannot intelligently choose to speak to a deceased loved one. There is nothing weird about doing so. It is obviously very useful and strengthening for millions. And no one can explain how this interaction may work, and it's not necessary to have an explanation.

We know that spiritual traditions around the world suggest praying to deceased loved ones. The best-selling author, Thomas Moore, insightfully recalls part of his mother's legacy: "My mother honored the dead and communicated with her ancestors constantly. She taught me this piece of practical mystical theology, and I will continue to follow her way.

Depending on your belief system, incorporate conversations with your loved one as a way to cope with your loss and reinvest in life. As one woman who was engaged to be married told me recently, "It's been over eight years and I still converse with him [her first husband]. I tell him to go out there and help our son." This woman is as grounded as anyone you would want to meet, and has learned to incorporate nonphysical reality into her lifestyle. You can too, and live life more fully.

Why It's Okay to Talk to a Deceased Loved One

Dr. LaGrand is a grief counselor and the author of eight books, the most recent, the popular Love Lives On: Learning from the Extraordinary Encounters of the Bereaved. He is known world-wide for his research on the Extraordinary Experiences of the bereaved (after-death communication phenomena) and is one of the founders of Hospice of the St. Lawrence Valley, Inc. His free monthly ezine website is http://www.extraordinarygriefexperiences.com

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Friday, June 15, 2012

Five Ways Toward Accepting the Death of a Loved One

The major task of mourning the death of a loved one is acceptance. That is, accepting the reality that the loved one is no longer with you and accepting the multiplicity of changes that are taking place in your life due to the loss. Resisting inevitable change only leads to more pain.

There are two levels of acceptance. The first, intellectual acceptance is easy to come by. We can acknowledge the death of a loved one. However, emotional acceptance is a different story; it takes a much longer time because it involves the process of withdrawing our emotional investment in the physical presence of the loved one.

Grief Loss

Here are five ways you can assure yourself that your grief work will not be prolonged and you can eventually accept the death of your loved one on an emotional level. Much of this is internal work and will call on you to strengthen your inner life.

Five Ways Toward Accepting the Death of a Loved One

1. Embrace the fact that life will be different; it is a new life. This means realizing you have to give up some of the old routines involving your beloved. Giving up the old for the new is a major challenge. The inability to commit to this fact of life is what often brings on much depression and you use up precious energy in resisting. Decide as soon as possible that you will accept changes imposed by loss and start doing things that will accommodate change.

2. Realize your social circle and/or support network may be drastically altered. If you are widowed, there are some situations involving couples that you will not be invited to. This is often very difficult to deal with. There are also some people, even good friends, who are fearful of death and will tend to steer clear of conversations about your loved one. You will sense their uneasiness. Simply spend more time with those who meet your needs. And, you may have to search for new friends.

3. Work on reducing the amount of time you give to negative thoughts. Negative thinking involves thoughts about your supposed inability to cope with all your new responsibilities, roles, and challenges. Negative thoughts will never create the courage needed to deal with change. They are the number one force in prolonging grief.

4. Look for support from knowledgeable sources. Seeking knowledge and support from credible resources is very wise. Most mourners grieve deep within based on many myths that were accepted as truths early in life. Look for information in four areas: emotional, (how to manage emotions) spiritual (how best to utilize your faith traditions), physical (how to use exercise to reduce tension and anxiety), and mental (how to use your mind to calm yourself and change focus). All of these will assist in reducing the pain of loss.

Ask yourself in which area you are most lacking and go for it. Read. Ask others who have had similar loss experiences, people who conduct grief support groups, in hospices, churches, or hospitals, or if need be, a professional grief counselor. Every mourner's information needs will differ.

5. All mourners need a companion, an ally, someone who will walk with you through the painful journey. Search for one or more who always lets you be in charge of your grieving, offers choices, and does not tell you what you should be feeling or doing. Bounce your ideas and emotions off this person. Ask for their opinion on specific issues and then decide what you will do based on your analysis of all of the advice you have received.

Acceptance of your great loss is your number one goal. Keep it in the forefront of your thinking as you confront each day. However, don't allow that focus to obscure the various points of healing you experience along the way. You will feel better, and then have a few reversals. As you keep working, the reversals will not hang around as long as they used to. You will think of your loved one with hope and comfort. You will know that you are moving forward as you accommodate loss and change, love in separation as well as in the now, and reinvest in life. Those are the operational definitions of acceptance.

Five Ways Toward Accepting the Death of a Loved One

Dr. LaGrand is a grief counselor and the author of eight books, the most recent, the popular Love Lives On: Learning from the Extraordinary Encounters of the Bereaved. He is known world-wide for his research on the Extraordinary Experiences of the bereaved (after-death communication phenomena) and is one of the founders of Hospice of the St. Lawrence Valley, Inc. His free monthly ezine website is http://www.extraordinarygriefexperiences.com

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Sympathy Words - A Few Ideas For Comforting Others

Nearly everybody has, at some time or another, experienced the loss of a loved one. Many have also been in the position to comfort a friend at the loss of someone dear to them. In either case, sympathy words are exchanged. The perennial problem is, of course, that in times of grief, it may be difficult to find the right words. It may in fact be difficult to physically say them at all. However, it's important to express your sympathy to your friend or loved one.

What Words of Sympathy to Say

Grief Loss

Here is something to think about: If you had just lost one of your parents or a sibling, what would you find comforting? How well you know someone is a good litmus test of what you should say and how you should say it. When finding sympathy words, always remember to whom you are speaking. If that person is a very private individual, he or she may prefer to be left alone for the most part. In that case, knowing when the appropriate time to approach is essential to successfully providing comforting sympathy words to the grieving person.

Sympathy Words - A Few Ideas For Comforting Others

Choosing your words when you are called on to comfort someone in grief is more complicated than just trying to make them feel better. You want them to know that you can empathize with their pain. The difficult part in all of that is knowing that they will have heard sympathy words from perhaps a hundred other people as well, so what can you say that will truly give them peace and closure? Look to samples of sympathy words online for inspiration. Obituaries Help.org, has words of sympathy samples in cards, letters, sayings and quotes. Read some examples before you sit down to write your own words of sympathy.

A Short List of Sympathy Words

The following is a short list of sympathy words you can say to someone to bring him or her comfort.
You are always in my prayers He/She would be very happy to know that you loved him/her so much Always remember that you have friends and we are here for you, so if there is anything you need, please don't hesitate to ask. You can find peace in the good memories that you have I know this is hard, but you can make it through

These are just a few things that people have found to be helpful over the years. They are effective mainly because the speaker empathizes with the bereaved. That is the main thing, and it cannot be overstated. Your sympathy words should show that you empathize with the kind of pain they are experiencing, and that you can help them through it.

Sympathy Phrases to Avoid

Saying "I know how you feel" to someone who has lost a loved one is not the best way to show your sympathy. Words like that can sometimes hurt more than they help because no one can truly know what another person is feeling about anything, especially the death of someone dear. ObituariesHelp.org also has lists of Phrases to Avoid for sympathy sayings or words of sympathy.

Also, avoid being at all insincere. Again, remember that this person will most likely have heard sympathy words from many other people over a few days, so the last thing they want to hear is condolences that are not heartfelt. Don't offer your help if you can't or won't actually help.

Actions Speak Louder than Words

Sometimes, offering sympathy words can involve no words at all. Making a meal for someone when you know they don't feel like cooking for themselves can be a great help. Simply offering a hug is often a very comforting gesture. Day to day tasks may be hard for the bereaved to complete. Doing their dishes, mowing the lawn, taking the kids to school or other activities are all ways to show you care and are simple sympathy gestures that mean so much.

The grieving process is different for everybody, but the one immutable truth behind everybody's experience is that the right words or gestures can go a long way towards easing the pain of this difficult transition in their lives.

Sympathy Words - A Few Ideas For Comforting Others

Melanie Walters recommends ObituariesHelp.org for Free Sympathy Words and Sayings examples, genealogy resources, guides to building a family tree, written examples of eulogies as well as help with funeral planning.

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Monday, June 11, 2012

Condolence Messages For Sympathy Cards and Bereavement Cards

Condolence Messages

Bereavement cards may seem like a small effort in light of the terrible loss suffered by recipients. However, the sincere bereavement sympathy wordings you'll find on these condolence messages is often exactly what the person needs to let them know people do care about their loss and are there to support them during a horrible time in their lives. While there are a few other things you can do as well, such as sending flowers, sending these cards is the best place to start.

Grief Loss

Tips on Sympathy Card Messages

Condolence Messages For Sympathy Cards and Bereavement Cards

First, you'll want to remember that your message does not need be very long. Hopefully, the family will be receiving many such card sympathy and may not have the energy to read a lengthy message. Plus, the more you end up writing the better the risk of saying something which might be hurtful, even if it's only an accidental slip. For example, some writers of condolence sympathy thank you cards have mistakenly written "Time heals all wounds" as a way of trying to perk up the grieving person but the reaction is usually the opposite.

A good idea is to stick with a few basic messages. Make sure you add phrases to your sympathy cards such as "With deepest sympathy" or "You're in our prayers." It's also nice to mention some fond memories you have of the deceased person. Always refer to the deceased by name even if you did not know him or her very well.

Other Tips for printed Sympathy Cards

If you knew the deceased person very well, it's completely fine to write a bit more and mention how much the person meant to you. Briefly mentioning a special memory or anecdote might be a nice touch, too. Make sure you sign the message with your full name so the recipient will know specifically who sent the message. If the bereavement card is coming from your entire family, make sure to include "and Family" after your signature.

When you send custom condolence messages, it's perfectly fine to express a willingness to do something kind for the bereaved person. Don't make an open ended offer. The person may need your assistance but may not even realize what needs to be done because of his or her grief. Plus, by making a more specific offer of assistance you won't have to worry about being asked to do anything you weren't willing to do in the first place.

If you've also sent flowers to the funeral, you don't need to mention this in the Christian sympathy cards or funeral cards. Also, you don't want to assume that the flowers themselves are a substitute for condolence cards. Most grieving families do not have a chance to read all of the cards included with the flowers so they may not know immediately who sent them. The loss sympathy cards are a good way of letting them know early on how that you are there for them during this time.

Attending the funeral does not mean you can't also send condolence messages. In fact, doing both is always a good and much appreciated idea.

Condolence Messages For Sympathy Cards and Bereavement Cards

Sarah Porter has written several articles about Writing Sympathy Cards, When to Send Bereavement Cards, Custom Condolence Cards, How to Write Bereavement Cards, Affordable Death Announcements, Free Funeral Cards, Popular Sympathy Thank You Cards, Unique Bereavement Sympathy Wordings, and lots more for CardsShoppe and Express-Invitations.

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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Solution - Focused Therapy

Most types of psychotherapy involve exploring feelings, being validated, finding explanations, exploring wishes and dreams, setting goals, and gaining more clarity. Every therapist has unique ways of working with clients, based on his or her personality, training, and views of how people change.

A solution-focused therapist is likely to do the following:

Grief Loss

1. Instead of going over past events and focusing on problems, the therapist helps you envision your future without today's problems.

Solution - Focused Therapy

2. During the course of therapy (often as few as 3 to 6 sessions), the therapist helps you discover solutions.

3. The therapist encourages you to identify and do more of what is already working.

4. The therapist guides you to identify what doesn't work and to focus on doing less of it.

5. The emphasis is on the future, not the past.

6. SFBT therapists believe that the client is the best expert about what it takes to change his or her life.

7. The therapist's role is to help you identify solutions that will remove the barriers to having the life you want.

Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) is a process that helps people change by constructing solutions rather than dwelling on problems. This type of therapy tends to be shorter-term than traditional psychotherapy. Steve de Shazer and Insoo Kim Berg of the Brief Family Therapy Center in Milwaukee are the originators of this form of therapy.

The SFBT therapist helps the client identify elements of the desired solution, which are usually already present in the client's life. The client learns to build on these elements, which form the basis for ongoing change. Rather than searching for the causes of the problem, the focus is on defining the changes and making them a reality. The two key therapeutic issues are: (1) how the client wants his or her life to be different, and (2) what it will take to make it happen.

Creating a detailed picture of what it will be like when life is better creates a feeling of hope, and this makes the solution seem possible. The therapist helps the client focus on the future and how it will be better when things change. It is important to develop a set of specific, detailed goals. These goals drive the therapy process and keep it focused and efficient.

Why SFBT Is Usually Short-Term

SFBT therapists don't set out to artificially limit the number of sessions. A good brief therapist will not focus on limiting sessions or time, but rather on helping clients set goals and develop strategies to reach those goals. Focusing on the client's goals and the concrete steps needed to achieve them usually takes less time than traditional therapy, in which the client typically spends many sessions talking about the past and explores reasons and feelings. SFBT therapists aim to provide clients with the most effective treatment in the most efficient way possible so that clients can achieve their goals and get on with their lives. As a result of this focus, the counseling process often requires as few as six sessions.

Types of Problems That SFBT Addresses

Solution-Focused Brief Therapy is an effective way of helping people solve many kinds of problems, including depression, substance abuse, eating disorders, relationship problems, and many other kinds of issues. Since it focuses on the process of change rather than on dissecting the problem, more serious issues do not necessarily require different treatment. The SFBT therapist's job is to help clients transform troubling issues into specific goals and an action plan for achieving them.

In The Miracle Method, authors Scott D. Miller and Insoo Kim Berg describe how to create solutions with these steps:

1. State your desire for something in your life to be different.

2. Envision that a miracle happens and your life is different.

3. Make sure the miracle is important to you.

4. Keep the miracle small.

5. Define the change with language that is positive, specific, concrete, and behavioral.

6. State how you will start your journey rather than how you will end it.

7. Be clear about who, where, and when, but not why.

Signs That You Should Consider Seeing a Therapist

There are several ways to know when you would be doing yourself a favor by finding a licensed, professional therapist to work with.

1. You've tried several things on your own, but you still have the problem.

2. You want to find a solution sooner rather than later.

3. You have thoughts of harming yourself or others.

4. You have symptoms of depression, anxiety, or another disorder that significantly interfere with your daily functioning and the quality of your life. For example, you have lost time from work, your relationships have been harmed, or your health is suffering. These are signs that you need the help of a trained, licensed professional.

Solution - Focused Therapy

Garrett Coan, MSW, LCSW is Founder and Director of the Center for Creative Counseling, a team of expert and licensed therapists and coaches providing phone and internet counseling services to clients throughout the United States and worldwide. To arrange a no-obligation, complimentary consultation, call 1-877-958-4769 or visit them on the Web at http://www.creativecounselors.com

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Friday, June 8, 2012

If Today Was Your Last Day

It is only when we truly know and understand that we have a limited time on earth -- and that we have no way of knowing when our time is up -- that we will begin to live each day to the fullest, as if it was the only one we had. ~Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

We all have just one life to live. We do not know how long we will be here, but it will not be forever. I think that makes time even more valuable. How we spend it matters. I love the song If Today Was Your Last Day by Nickelback that encourages us to appreciate each day as a gift and to consider what choices we would make today if tomorrow were too late.

Grief Loss

My dad loved life. I recall how grateful he was for the simplest things. He had an extremely poor upbringing and difficult life. From a very young age he struggled to survive and went to bed often without having eaten any food. He came to America in the 50s in search of a better life and he soon found it. For some time, he had it all-a beautiful wife, children, successful businesses, a nice home-more than he could have ever imagined. He was very happy and blessed. My dad always had a passion and gratitude for life and an ability to live one day at a time with complete faith and trust that tomorrow would be a better day. But life took a negative turn when he and my mother divorced, and he began to make some poor choices. Yet even then, he was thankful for each day and tried to make the best of it.

If Today Was Your Last Day

What especially inspired me about my dad is that he not only lived each day fully, but he did not want to leave this earth without making peace with my mother. The day he asked her to forgive him, he was made free and so was she. He made an important decision to make peace, to apologize and ask for forgiveness. Actually, he begged her for forgiveness. That day he decided that he was going to say what he needed to say before it was too late. A week later he passed away.

There is nothing more unsettling as having regret over words left unspoken or deeds left undone. Did you ever wish you faced the fear and took the risk? Did you ever wish you told someone you loved them? Asked for forgiveness? How about letting go of the past or the anger that robbed your peace of mind and ability to live fully? Or how about taking the chances you had to help and change someone's life for the better? I especially like this line in the song: Every second counts 'cause there's no second try. So live like you'll never live it twice. As long as you are still here, it is not too late to make good choices and live each day fully.

If today was your last day, what would you do? Are there words you have left unsaid? Do you want to tell someone that he or she is important to you? Is there someone you would call, someone who needs to hear you love him/her? Is there someone you would release and forgive? Can someone's life be changed because you can make a positive difference? Do you have something you can give that can help someone in need? If your answer is yes to any of the above, I encourage you to do it now. Tomorrow may be too late. Time does not wait for us. Let us seize our opportunities while we still have them. Let us say what is in our hearts and do what we know we ought to do. Our decisions today can impact eternity for ourselves and for others.

Somebody should tell us, right at the start of our lives, that we are dying. Then we might live life to the limit, every minute of every day. Do it I say!! Whatever you want to do, do it now! There are only so many tomorrows. ~Pope Paul VI

The question is not whether we will die, but how we live. ~Joan Borysenko

Copyright © 2010 Krystal Kuehn, New Day Counseling Center. All Rights Reserved.

If Today Was Your Last Day

Krystal Kuehn, MA, LPC, LLP, NCC is a psychotherapist, author, teacher & musician. She is the cofounder of New Day Counseling, a couples counseling and child therapy center, BeHappy4Life, an award-winning, self-help and inspirational site where you can find hundreds of free resources, insights & inspiration, and Baby-Poems, where you can find beautiful baby poems, baby quotes, cute sayings & baby videos that will touch your heart & increase your joy & gratitude for the children you love & enjoy! Krystal's is also the author of has several inspiring blogs: Words of Inspiration, Give Thanks Journal, Baby Poems & Be Your Best blog.

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Monday, June 4, 2012

A Funeral Poem For A Grieving Heart

Reading a funeral poem is a good idea when suffering a loss recently. It provides words that you may not be able to express on your own. Often reading will bring soothing feelings of calmness. Sometimes, its better than drinking a glass of wine or even taking medication! But remember, it depends on you and what you need emotionally. Even if you are taking or drinking that, you can still read a poem to renew your mind that there is hope after a death. Never give up hope, you can also join a support group. At some of these groups, you will get a whole list of poems to read. There will also be other families and individuals who are in a similar emotional state as you. You could even find friendships there as you learn to share with others that walk on the same journey as your in now.

When a family is in a bereavement state from losing a loved one, its customary to view and read bereavement poems or also called in loving memory poems. These are poetry that helps people with the grieving process and can lift their spirits to a happier place. Psychologist use them often to assist in the therapy of those who are mourning. It can be very therapeutic and soothing to hear the rhythmic words of a poem. You can purchase books on specific types of poetry or you can comb the web for them. It's harder to search online because you have to filter out many other types of poetry and it may take you hours or days to get it done. Whereas a book contains all of the preselected ones that will provide comfort immediately. So although you have to pay for it, its an instant read and there is no work on your part by to immerse yourself in the book.

Grief Loss

Memorial poems are a favorite for families to include. There are many to choose from at that website and is presented in an orderly format. There are brochures, graduated fold programs, funeral cards, prayer cards, memorial guest books, funeral bookmarks and large tabloid style booklets. Creating them on your own is simple and will give you some self satisfaction. Remember you can provide a reading with poems, scripture, and other written documents that would be appropriate for a funeral or memorial service. It's not as difficult as it may appear.

A Funeral Poem For A Grieving Heart
A Funeral Poem For A Grieving Heart

The Funeral Program Site has a wonderful selection of free funeral poems and funeral resources. There is also a beautiful selection of templates for funeral programs, funeral prayer cards, thank you cards, memorial bookmarks, funeral songs and booklets.

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Saturday, June 2, 2012

Poems at a Funeral - Poems For the Loss of a Loved One

Reading poems at a funeral can provide comfort to those who are suffering from the the loss of a loved one. Poets have the gift of being able to use words to give expression to the most sublime sentiments of the heart, and many of the most famous poets in history have used their talents to write about death and dying. Some poems about death can be dark, with emphasis on the misery of the dying and the grief of mourners. Others, however, express empathy for those who suffer while offering the comfort and inspiration that flows from the hope of a life after death.

There is certainly an element of subjectivity when evaluating poetry, and the effects of poems can vary significantly depending on the individuals who read or hear them. There are, however, some famous poems that seem particularly suitable for reading at funerals and for any stage of grief after the loss of a loved one.

Grief Loss

One of the poems that I happily recommend is "The Dying Christian To His Soul" by Alexander Pope. This poem approaches death from the perspective of the dying person, and is short enough to be comfortably read within a funeral service. It begins with the description of a conflict that exists within the dying person. The physical body is collapsing while the immortal soul within is seeking to continue expressing life. The dying person suffers uncertainty about what is happening in this new experience. As the senses of sight and hearing ebb away, the portal to heaven opens and a new version of life is discovered. The poem concludes with the immortal soul of the deceased making a triumphant, almost mocking proclamation of victory over death.

Poems at a Funeral - Poems For the Loss of a Loved One

Another poem that can offer comfort to those who have lost a loved one is "The Reaper And The Flowers" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Death is described as a Reaper who gathers flowers from the earth. The Reaper is not vengeful or vindictive, and does not come for destruction. Rather, he is an angel who is commissioned to gather tokens from the earth where the Lord of Paradise was once a child. The work of the Reaper is gentle, and he stoops and kisses the leaves of the flowers before tenderly gathering them, not for disposal, but to be transplanted in a heavenly field. This poem offers the beautiful message that there is meaning, value, and purpose in our deaths.

Although the poems previously mentioned are my personal favorites for times of mourning, "No Coward Soul Is Mine" by Emily Bronte deserves honorable mention for bringing our attention to immortality. It is a poem that offers comfort by its emphasis on eternal life.

If misery does love company, sometimes people who are deeply grieving may find comfort in poetry that focuses entirely on the pain of confronting death. "O Death, Rock Me Asleep" by Anne Boleyn describes the despair and anxiety of a prisoner awaiting execution. In "Bereavement" Percy Bysshe Shelly offers empathy with those who mourn while trusting in the eventual happiness of the afterlife.

Poems at a Funeral - Poems For the Loss of a Loved One

These poems are just a sample from the rich collection of work on death and dying that has been compiled throughout history. Visit http://www.usfreeads.com/2218593-cls.html for a comprehensive collection of the best 250 poems, readings, and quotes about death that are sure to assist you in finding an appropriate addition to a funeral service.

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Friday, June 1, 2012

Inspirational Grieving Quotes - Using Inspirational Grieving Quotes to Deal With Loss

Everyone at some point in their lives will deal with the death of a loved one, be it a family member, lover, friend, or pet. Using inspirational grieving quotes in art and art journaling is a healthy way to work through the grief and loss of a loved one.

When someone dies that you love dearly, there are so many stages of grieving you must go through. I don't think anyone really understands how complex grieving a death is. Death is not something that is talked about much in the U.S. culture. In movies it is usually depicted as something that doesn't really affect us emotionally, or something that the deceased one can come back from.

Grief Loss

Inspirational grieving quotes can and do help lots of people move through the grieving process, especially if they are combined with journaling and/or artwork creation. Below I've provided a couple of art ideas that you can use with inspirational grieving quotes.

Inspirational Grieving Quotes - Using Inspirational Grieving Quotes to Deal With Loss

But first, here are my top ten favorite quotes on death:

"For what is it to die, But to stand in the sun and melt into the wind? And when the Earth has claimed our limbs, Then we shall truly dance." - Kahlil Gibran " Death is the most beautiful adventure in life." - Charles Frohman "Life is eternal and love is immortal; And death is only a horizon, And a horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight." - Rossiter W. Raymond "The mystery of love is greater than the mystery of death." - Unknown "Death is not extinguishing the light; it is putting out the lamp because dawn has come." - Rabindranath Tagore "Our earthly loss is always a heavenly gain." - Antonio Talbert "Perhaps they are not stars, but openings in the Heaven, Where the love of our lost ones pours through and shines down upon us, To let us know they are happy." - Author Unknown "Death is not the end. Death can never be the end. Death is the road. Life is the traveller. The Soul is the Guide." - Sri Chinmoy "I think of death as some delightful journey that I shall take when all my tasks are done." - Ella Wheeler Wilcox "Death--- the last sleep? No the final awakening." - Walter Scott
Art Ideas For Use With Inspirational Grieving Quotes:

Letters to Heaven Mail Box

It doesn't need to be "Heaven", it can be The Universe, The After Life, etc. Find a shoe box (or other type of box) and decorate it in a way that you think a "mail box in heaven" would look like. Use your imagination. Write letters, create drawings, or write out quotes and poems to your loved one. Put your letters and drawings in envelopes and address them to departed one. Or find inspirational grieving quotes that move you and write them on postcards (these can be homemade). Put your letters and postcards in the mail box and visualize then being picked up by an angel or spirit and delivered directly to the addressee. Imagine how happy they will be to receive your letters.

Using Grieving Quotes in Art Journaling

Find a quote that really say what you're feeling. Print or write them out in big letters on pretty paper and cut them up into individual words. Next look for images in magazines or draw your own images. Paste the images onto a piece of paper or into a journaling book. Place the words that form the quote on the page. Move them around until you like the way they look on the page, but still keeping them in a reading order. Glue them onto the page. If you're using a journal, consider naming this journal as a "grieving journal or naming it after your loved one. If its on a piece of paper, decorate a large envlope or box to keep all of your grieving artwork in.

It doesn't matter if you don't believe they will ever see or read these inspirational grieving quotes or your artwork. What is important is doing these things will help you move thro your feelings and help you move through the grieving process.

Inspirational Grieving Quotes - Using Inspirational Grieving Quotes to Deal With Loss

You don't have to deal with the grief by yourself. There are many other quotes on death and grieving and many creative projects to help you deal with the lose of a loved one. You can find lots more help at the Self Help Healing Arts Journal: a free website that teaches people how to use art as a healing tool. To see more inspirational grieving quotes click here.

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