|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Helpers often ask questions such as: "What should I do? What should I say? Am I doing the right thing? Did I do the wrong thing?" Here are some suggestions for how to best help those in grief.
1) Do give grievers the permission to grieve. You do this by your presence, understanding and acceptance of where they are.
2) Do expect volatile reactions from the bereaved. Those in grief are on an emotional roller coaster.
3) Do be "present" to the bereaved. Give the griever your full attention as they share their loss with you. It is so very meaningful to them and therapeutic as well.
4) Do view the loss from the griever's perspective. Their loss is unique and their pain is their own. You cannot know their loss without viewing it from their perspective.
5) Do maintain an appropriate emotional distance from the griever. Do not make their loss your loss.
6) Do encourage verbalization of feelings and memories of the deceased. Talking about the one who died is therapeutic for those suffering grief. It helps them process their loss and begin to formulate perspective.
7) Do help the bereaved recognize and accept the loss.
8) Do listen non-judgmentally and with acceptance.
9) Do allow the grieved to cry, talk, and review without interruption.
10) Do help the griever with normative data about the grief process. Assure the grieved that they are not "crazy" and that what they are experiencing is all a part of the grief process.
11) Do help the griever with practical responsibilities (grocery shopping, take the children for a couple of hours, drive to the bank, make phone calls, etc.).
12) Do help the griever understand the need to develop a new relationship with the deceased.
13) Do be informed about grief and providing gentle compassionate care.
14) Do be helpful and keep in touch.
15) Do encourage healing.
16) Do encourage counseling if behaviors appear pathological or extreme.
17) Do be aware that weekends, holidays and evenings may be more difficult for the bereaved.
18) Do help the bereaved avoid unrealistic expectations as to how they "should" feel and when they will be better. It is helpful when appropriate to say, "I don't know how you are able to do as well as you are."
19) Do ask griever to accompany you on some outing or engage in some activities with you (at appropriate time of course).
20) Do encourage grievers to participate in support groups.
Rev. Saundra L. Washington, D.D., is an ordained clergywoman, social worker, and Founder of AMEN Ministries. http://www.clergyservices4u.org She is also the author of two coffee table books: Room Beneath the Snow: Poems that Preach and Negative Disturbances: Homilies that Teach. Her new book, Out of Deep Waters: A Grief Healing Workbook, will be available soon.



Wind Chimes and more... Suicide strikes...AGAIN!This may wind up being the most important article... Read More The following is a report that indicates how you might... Read More New Tears [about Grieving]If it rains or shinesLittle does it... Read More When the death of a loved one occurs, regardless or... Read More It was a moment I will never forget.On February 22,... Read More "Dad, I tried to wake Nana, I think she's dead."... Read More It's a familiar story, and I have been through it... Read More It was a couple of weeks after Christmas, and I... Read More The well-known pioneer researcher Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross identified five states... Read More Suicide is the one form of death that has quite... Read More Today's Quote: "My house is burned down, but I can... Read More For most people life is a fairly ordinary existence -... Read More Overcoming death and beginning once again to live is the... Read More Remembering someone special in a personal way can be healing... Read More Over one hundred years ago, during the Victorian era, death... Read More WHAT I LEARNED FROM POPE JOHN PAUL II ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I am... Read More 1) Don't try to make the grieving person feel better.... Read More For most children, their first experience with grief comes with... Read More Silent tears hit hospital-white sheets. The young Pakistani mother holds... Read More We all experience severe heart break at some time in... Read More Recently, several suicides have occurred right here in my own... Read More When I invited Martha to the gathering at my house,... Read More When he looked at me, it was clear my father... Read More With my father, his brother and their father having had... Read More No one likes to think about illness and death, when... Read More
Windchimes
for great gifts!
Suicide in the Church, Part 3
How to Deal with Suicide and Euthenasia
New Tears [about Grievng--with commentary]
Coping With A Funeral
Beyond A Mothers Nightmare To Radical Forgiveness
Coping with Grief - Its Called Living Through It
What this Rabbi Learned from Not being Re-hired
An Unexpected Letter
Are We All Losers? Understanding Grief
Suicide - An Eternal Pain
In the Blink of an Eye
Whats It All About?
Learning to Live Again
How To Write A Eulogy
Then and Now
Pope John Paul II
Grief Support: The Don?ts
Whens Sarah Coming Home? Helping Your Child Understand Death
Silent Tears - from a Norwegian Hospital
How To Heal Your Heart
Suicide in the Church Part 1
Scared to Death of Dying and Denying Grief
Dads, Life, and Death
If Ever It Is Me
Terminal Illness- Death and Grief
September 11th changed America and chances are it changed you.... Read More
When I invited Martha to the gathering at my house,... Read More
It felt like I had been run over by a... Read More
New Tears [about Grieving]If it rains or shinesLittle does it... Read More
Justin was a typical ten year old boy. He liked... Read More
Why We Fear Death"Men fear death as children fear to... Read More
I am 23 years old. I come from a large... Read More
Over one hundred years ago, during the Victorian era, death... Read More
The delight lit my face as the couple turned the... Read More
There is only one place where tragedy occurs, and that... Read More
It was a moment I will never forget.On February 22,... Read More
Not long after Arlyn died, my husband and I decided... Read More
Pippin needed assistance from his owner to get to his... Read More
I've always waited for the perfect moment to be happy:... Read More
For most children, their first experience with grief comes with... Read More
There is so much emphasis on emotional intelligence these days... Read More
The well-known pioneer researcher Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross identified five states... Read More
All of us at one time or another have felt... Read More
When he looked at me, it was clear my father... Read More
Helpers often ask questions such as: "What should I do?... Read More
It's a familiar story, and I have been through it... Read More
In a town the size of mine - about 16,000... Read More
I got an email recently from someone whose mother died.... Read More
Do you spend most of your time inside or outside... Read More
Reflect upon the following questions, and answer those you feel... Read More
Dealing with Grief & Loss |