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Grief is a completely normal reaction to that loss. But even though almost everyone goes through it, we are not so good at helping each other cope. Especially when the person grieving is a child.
While we all feel grief and loss, and each of us is unique in the ways we cope with our feelings. Some people have healthy coping skills. They're able to feel grief without losing sight of their ...
On Grief and Grieving: Finding the Neaning of Grief Through the Five Stages of Loss by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross Elisabeth Kübler - Ross’s On Death and Dying changed the way we talk about the end of life.
The best-selling grief books for healing. If you’re recently bereaved, there are several books on coping with grief that can help you deal with the loss of a loved one. This list of books for ...
A version of this article appeared in the January 31, 2024 edition of Education Week as Teaching About Grief and Loss: One State’s New Requirement for Schools. Most Popular Stories.
For people dealing with grief, the holidays may feel anything but merry. NPR's Michel Martin asks Michelle Palmer of the Wendt Center for Loss and Healing about navigating loss.
1. Understanding Your Grief, Alan D. Wolfelt. Among the experts we spoke to, nearly all cited Alan Wolfelt, the founder of the Center for Loss and Life Transition, as their No. 1 author on grief.
It was a loss that Adam Gerace, a senior psychology lecturer at Central Queensland University in Australia, wanted to know more about. So he asked almost 1,300 Australians how they were feeling ...
In the United Kingdom, one parent of a child or young adult dies every 20 minutes.Feelings of emptiness, loneliness, or deep sadness can occur with grief, even though it is an inevitable part of life.
Over the eight episodes of “All There Is,” the CNN anchor digs into his own family traumas as well as those of others. Undertaking the podcast about grief and loss helped Anderson Cooper ...
Grief. Everyone will experience it at some point in their lives, and some deal with it sooner than others. So how (and when) do we talk to our children about grief and loss?