Title: LOSS AND GRIEF
1 Loss and Grief
The Aging Survival Kit
2Grief A Universal Experience
- To spare oneself from grief at all cost can be
achieved only at the price of total detachment,
which excludes the ability to experience
happiness. - Erich Fromm (1900-1980)
3Five Stages of Grief(Kubler-Ross, 1969)
- Denial The initial stage It cant be
happening. - Anger Why ME? Its not fair?! (either
referring to God, oneself, or anybody perceived,
rightly or wrongly as responsible) - Bargaining Just let me live to see my son
graduate. - Depression I am so sad, why bother with
anything? - Acceptance Its going to be OK.
4Five Stages of Grief, Continued
- These stages of grief do not come in order. They
can be applied to any form of catastrophic life
losses - Loved One
- Employment
- Home
- Income
- Freedom
- According to Kubler-Ross a person simultaneously
experiences two of the stages at any given time.
5Understanding Loss(Rando, 1984)
- Avoidance Shock, denial, disbelief, confusion,
disorganization. - Confrontation highly emotional state wherein
the grief is most intense and the psychological
reactions to loss are felt most acutely. - Reestablishment gradual decline of the grief
and marks the beginning of an emotional and
social reentry back into the everyday world (pp.
28-29).
6Understanding Loss, Continued
- According to Rando, the griever will
- Acknowledge, accept, and understand the reality
of the loss. - Experience the pain of the grief and react to the
separation from that which is lost. - Adapt a new way of life.
- Reinvest in a new way of life.
7Anticipatory Mourning(Rando, 2000)
- The phenomenon encompassing seven generic
operations - Grief
- Mourning
- Coping
- Interaction
- Psychosocial reorganization
- Planning
- Balancing conflicting demands
- Facilitating an appropriate death (p. 51)
8Disenfranchised Grief(Doka, 2002)
- According to Doka this grief is experienced in
connection with a loss that is not socially
acknowledged, publicly shared, or supported
through usual rituals. The significance of the
loss is either not recognized or the relationship
between the deceased and the bereaved is not
socially sanctioned, the person suffering the
loss is given little or no opportunity to mourn
publicly. It is experienced when the relationship
is not recognized (lovers, ex-spouses, same-sex
partners, close friends), when the loss itself is
not recognized (stillbirth, miscarriage,
abortion, adoption, pet loss), when the griever
is not recognized (very young, very old,
developmentally disabled). The manner of death
itself can be disenfranchising (murder, suicide,
AIDS). When such deaths are treated as less than
significant losses, the process of grieving
becomes more difficult.
9The Grief Process(Worden, 1982)
- The Tasks of Grief
- To accept the loss
- Experience the pain
- Adjust to the new environment
- Reinvest in the new reality
10Complicated Grief(Worden, 2001)
- Chronic Grief One that is prolonged, is
excessive in duration, and never comes to a
satisfactory conclusion. - Delayed Grief Emotion that has been inhibited,
suppressed, or postponed. A subsequent loss may
elicit an exaggerated reaction because the
bereaved is grieving for two losses. - Exaggerated Grief Occurs when feelings of fear,
hopelessness, depression, or other symptoms
become so excessive that they interfere with the
daily existence of the bereaved. - Masked Grief Symptoms and behaviors experienced
by a person who does not recognize the fact that
these are related to a loss.
11Case Study
- Mr. and Mrs. B. have been married for 50 years.
They have been in good health and have been
enjoying retirement (traveling, seeing their
grandchildren and sleeping until noon!) - Both Mr. and Mrs. B. will be turning 70 this year
and the family are planning a BIG surprise party. - One morning Mrs. B. wakes up and she can not move
the left side of her body. Mr. B. calls an
ambulance and the family physician. Mrs. B. is
taken to the hospital.
12Case Study, Continued
- Upon Mrs. B.s arrival at the hospital you have
been assigned as her social worker. You have just
been to a workshop on loss and grief and have
been reviewing the powerpoint (Yes, this one!).
What do you consider to be the most pressing
medical, psychosocial, and spiritual concerns
that they will both face? - What will grief look like to
- Mr. B
- Mrs. B
- Their family (all 30 people!)
- How will you, as the social worker, provide a
therapeutic intervention that will meet their
needs. - Is meeting everyones needs possible or
realistic?
13Who Dies?(Levine, 1982)
- How much of what we call grief is the experience
of previous loss? And how do we allow such grief
not to be a motivator for our life? How do we get
in touch with that deep pain, that place of loss
that creates a fear of life itself, our doubt in
ourselves about our ability to deeply experience
the world because we so fear loss and change?
14Bibliography
- Gehlert, S., Browne, T.A. (2006). Handbook of
Health Social Work. Hoboken, NJ John Wiley
Sons, Inc. - Levine, S. (1982). Who Dies? An Investigation of
Conscious Living and Conscious Dying. New York
Anchor Books. - Kubler-Ross, E. (1973). On Death and Dying. New
York Routledge. - Kubler-Ross, E., and Kessler, D. (2005). On Grief
and Grieving Finding the Meaning of Grief
Through the Five Stages of Loss. New York
Scribner.