1. Global strategies
  2. Coping with bereavement

Coping with bereavement

  • Dealing with loss

Description

Coping with bereavement involves practical actions to manage grief and restore daily functioning after loss. Essential strategies include seeking emotional support from friends, family, or professionals; maintaining routines to provide stability; expressing feelings through conversation or creative outlets; and accessing community or therapeutic resources. These measures help individuals process emotions, reduce isolation, and gradually adapt to life changes, thereby mitigating the risk of prolonged distress and promoting psychological resilience.This information has been generated by artificial intelligence.

Context

The loss of someone close is a painful experience. Most people are likely to be bereaved several times in their lives and to face the tasks of coming to terms with the loss. Bereavement brings more than distress and sadness: the loss can induce other painful feelings, such as guilt over things said or done in the past. There may also be anger or resentment directed toward the deceased person or to others. There may also be associated depressive or physical disorders. Not uncommonly people then need to unburden their painful thoughts by talking about them with their family and friends. This is part of the grief process, whereby the individual gradually adjusts to life without the deceased person.

Implementation

The Shona peoples of Africa have their burial ritual and time of mourning, but their final ceremony is that of settling the spirit, of inviting the spirit back home. The final goal is the continuing community, a community that has worked through the upset caused by the physical departure of one of its members and can acknowledge his or her continuing presence. Jews, like the Shona, also bury the body within a day or so and then the close family "sit shiva". They sit in the living room at home for a week, while friends, realities and neighbours come to visit, bringing food, talking about the departed. Then after a week of talking endlessly laughing, crying and sharing memories, the family slowly gets back to ordinary life.

Broader

Narrower

Grieving
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Denying death
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Facilitated by

Problem

Bereavement
Presentable

Value

Loss
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Double-standard
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Bereavement
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Reference

Web link

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
Content quality
Presentable
 Presentable
Language
English
1A4N
V0451
DOCID
13204510
D7NID
207787
Editing link
Official link
Last update
Jun 13, 2019