Contents:
Investing Ourselves in Ceremonies.
Choosing Our Own Ways. Holding Them in Memory.
Negative Ties That Bind Us. Memories and Dying Days.
Remembering at the Time of Death. Fragile and Fleeting Memories. Incomplete and Partial Memories.
Loss and Soul Pain. They Are with Us in Our Souls.
Soul Food and Soul Music. Meeting Them in Familiar Places. Seeing Them in Others. Touching Our Souls in Mysterious Ways. Learning to Be Soulful. Loss and Spiritual Pain.
In The Heart of Grief, Attig gives us an inspiring and profoundly insightful meditation on the meaning of grief, showing how it can be the path toward a lasting love. In The Heart of Grief, Attig gives us an inspiring and profoundly insightful meditation on the meaning Death and the Search for Lasting Love.
Their Spirits Are with Us. Grief is a Journey of the Heart. Lewis Carla ceremonies of separation challenges cherish choose comfort companions continue dead death deeply delight died draw inspiration dying enduring connection everyday experiences face families and communities family and friends family members father favorite feel fellow survivors felt funeral funeral director Gabe Gabe's Grace Grandma grief Grief Observed grieving hearts Henry hold hope hurt Joanne Kathryn knew lasting love Laura legacies let go Lewis life's companions lives loss marriage meaning memories mother never Nina ourselves pain and anguish pain of missing parents peak experiences places presence realize recall relationships remember responsibility riences Sam Keen sense shared someone Sometimes Soul Food soul music soul pain spirits stories talk tell things tivate told touched troubled unfinished business walk wonderful.
Understanding and Treating People Cox , Robert Bendiksen , Robert G.
A Handbook for Care Relearning the World OUP. A former professor of philosophy and Past President of the Association for Death Education and Counseling, he is a highly sought-after speaker. He lives in San Francisco, California.
He invites you to visit his website, www. Where Are They Now? Complicated Grieving and Bereavement: Memorials remind us of them and the meanings of their lives.
Memories of them delight and enrich us. Their practical influences shape our daily lives. We identify with their characters.
We draw inspiration from them. As we hold them in our hearts in these ways, we further their interests, give them a symbolic immortality, and fulfill their desires that we live well after they've gone. We use and find meaning in their legacies.
We address our own suffering and find consolation that tempers the pain of missing them. Skip over navigation Sitemap. The Heart of Grief: