Project 5 of 12 toward high-nurturance relationships and families

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What Is Good Grief, and  Why Do It?

Seven Requisites for Healthy Mourning

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this article is http://sfhelp.org/05/grief-intro.htm

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        This is one of over 150 articles focused on building wholistic health, high-nurturance family relationships and preventing divorce. This introduction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make. These articles augment, vs. replace, other qualified professional help.

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

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        Option: learn about yourself and raise your interest in this series of "Good Grief" articles by getting undistracted and curious, and taking this quiz before continuing...

        This two-page introductory article covers...

  • Why this series of Project-5 Web resources exists;

  • Grieving terms used in this series;

  • What adults and kids need to know about their losses (broken bonds);

  • The three levels of healthy grieving, and their several phases; and ...

  • Seven requisites for healthy grief.

        See this index for the other articles in this Project-5 series, and these vital questions people (like you) should research about healthy grieving.

  Why Does This Series on Good Grief Exist?

       Thruout their lives, healthy infants, kids, and adults (like you) automatically form bonds (emotional / spiritual attachments) to special living and inanimate things. By choice or chance, these bonds break, creating painful invisible and physical losses.

        Nature provides an automatic way to process the questions, thoughts, and painful feelings created by losses over time, understand and accept broken bonds and their impacts, and regain personal and social balances and life purpose. This natural process is the slow mental + emotional + spiritual process of grief, or mourning.

        Healthy grief requires seven personal and environmental factors.  Few adults and no kids can name them. Can you? A sobering implication is - many parents are unable to provide, model, and teach these good-grief requisites to their kids.

        Without the requisites, mourning may be slowed or blocked. This can promote serious personal, relationship, and family problems, including chronic sickness or depression; addictions; obesity; hypertension; "endless" rage or sadness; difficulty sleeping, digesting, concentrating, and/or forming new bonds; divorce/s; and premature death.

        From my personal and clinical experience since 1981, incomplete grief (i.e. lack of good-grief requisites) seems so prevalent that I include it among four or five core hazards that promote epidemic personal and family misery, stress, and illness in our society.

        Americans avoid recognizing this by condoning laws and ceaseless distractions (like TV, PCs, iPods, and cell phones) which discourage personal solitude, reflection, and awareness - key grieving requisites. Do you agree? 

        U.S. mental health workers are just beginning to recognize incomplete ("complicated") grief is a serious, widespread condition in our country. This recent research summary notes that it is not yet recognized as an "official" mental-health condition by the American Psychiatric Association (APA). 

        Incomplete grief has distinct behavioral symptoms. Knowing them can help people like you identify missing personal and family requisites, and facilitate the grief process in themselves and others. This is specially important in typical troubled (low nurturance) and divorcing families and stepfamilies, whose adults and kids are prone to many major losses, requisite-deficits, and incomplete grief.

        SO - this series of Project-5 Web articles and resources exists to...

  • inform site visitors on basic realities about...

    • psychological attachments and losses,

    • three levels of healthy grief and their phases, and...

    • seven requisites for healthy grief; and to ...

  • provide a useful way of assessing...

    • personal and family grieving policies (healthy > unhealthy) and permissions (encouraging > discouraging); and...

    • the status of mourning important losses in kids and adults (blocked > incomplete > complete); and this series exists to...

  • provide practical options for visitors to acquire the healthy-grief requisites and help family members - specially kids - grieve well - i.e. to fully accept their inevitable life-losses, and regain their personal balances and life-interests. And this series also exists to...

  • help courting partners with and without existing kids learn how to assess whether incomplete grief and what causes it could promote unwise commitment decisions (Project 7).

Note: The Project-5 Web resources are integrated in two chapters of the guidebook Stepfamily Courtship. (Xlibris.com, 2001). Most of the book pertains to all courting couples

        One element of effective personal and family grieving policies is learning how to talk clearly about bonding, loss, and grieving concepts. That invites learning and using some....

 Grief Concepts and Terms

       In this nonprofit Web site and its guidebooks...

bonding is the normal emotional - spiritual process of developing an interest in, appreciation for, enjoyment of, and spontaneous caring for, a living thing, or a prized place, ritual, activity, idea, sound, smell, object, dream (hope), memory, or fantasy.

        Some psychologically-wounded survivors of childhood neglect are unable to bond or love, and have no losses to grieve.

        Bonding (a) is different than needing (depending on), (b) may be one-way or mutual, and (c) may or may not include the feeling of love

to lose means a process or event which results in an adult or child being deprived temporarily or permanently of part or all of something s/he's bonded (attached) to.

loss may mean (a) this process, or (b) the abstract or tangible thing that is reduced or gone. All losses are changes, but not all changes cause losses (broken bonds).

a loser is a person who is deprived by choice or chance of something they cherish.

grieving and mourning both mean the long, natural mental-emotional-spiritual process that heals the pain and emptiness of a significant loss over time unless blocked by the loser and/or their environment.

good grief means an unhindered natural process that completes well enough to allow the loser to (a) fully accept major losses on mental, emotional, and spiritual levels; and (b) eventually resume normal life and form new bonds.

grief levels refer to related mental + emotional + spiritual domains of the normal mourning process. Each level has several observable phases.

blocked grief occurs one one or more levels when a person and/or family lacks the requisites to grieve well. If prolonged, blocked (incomplete) grief promotes significant personal and family stress. 

complicated grief is an emerging term some health professionals use to denote serious incomplete mourning and its toxic effects

grief permissions are internal (personal) and social encouragements to move through the natural mourning process to completion. Without stable permissions, grieving slows or stops.

grief requisites - seven things that typical kids and adults need in order to grieve healthily.

a grieving policy is a set of semi-conscious attitudes + values + expectations about bonding and "proper" or "healthy" grief conduct.

        Every person and family unconsciously evolves such a policy, and is often unable to articulate it without studying mourning basics, meditation, and discussion. Personal, home, and family grief policies range from healthy (grief-promoting) to toxic (grief-blocking).

grief support occurs when one or more people accept and empathically encourage (permit) a loser to move through their process towards full loss-acceptance. The alternative is discouraging a loser from moving through the three grief levels in their own way. This often stems from a low family nurturance level, and toxic personal and/or family grief policies.

        How do these definitions compare with yours?

Perspective on Losses

        A high majority of average adults and kids, including many mental-health professionals, automatically associate "grief" with the death of a loved person or pet. Actually, we must mourn the endings of many things we bond with (above) throughout our lives. In understanding and promoting good grief, it helps to realize that our losses…

are inevitable for any child or adult who is genuinely able to bond;

can be tangible (e.g. loss of a prized physical thing or place),

and/or invisible (e.g. losing a dream, a relationship, trust, security, hope, a security, a ritual, a freedom, an ability, a group status, an identity, a family role, a purpose, ...); And ...

our losses may be planned and expected (e.g. a chosen job change, graduation, or geographic move), or unforeseen (e.g. a car crash or illness); and....

very slow (like natural aging), or sudden (e.g. being robbed, flooded, or fired without warning).

Many concurrent modest losses may have a cumulative emotional impact in us, if not well mourned as we go; And specific losses...

are experienced uniquely by each of us - e.g. a child usually reacts differently to the loss of a pet hamster than their parent does; and...

Well-mourned losses usually make hope and new bondings possible, like acquiring a new friend, partner, or pet.

        Notice your thoughts and feelings now. Do you agree with these premises? Were you taught these things as a child? Was your mate (if any)? Are you - or is someone else -  teaching these ideas about loss to the young people in your home and life? They are part of an informed grieving policy.

  What Is "Grieving"?

       We're each born with the innate capacity to form minor to major psychological bonds, or attachments. Because Life usually forces most bonds to break, we're also naturally able to grieve or mourn - i.e. to move through a predictable sequence of emotional, mental, and sometimes spiritual phases.

        If unhindered, this healing sequence eventually relieves our painful, distracting thoughts and feelings from broken bonds over time by attaining true acceptance of our losses and their personal and social effects. Our genetic programming to survive and to grow naturally tries to move us through concurrent mental, emotional, and - for some - spiritual levels of grief.

        Let's explore each level briefly. The following will make more sense if you study this summary of grieving levels and phases, and return here.

The Emotional Level of Good Grief 

        Noted British researcher John Bowlby proposed that young children's' grieving of absent caregivers has three emotional phases: protest, despair, and (emotional) detachment (unbonding and indifference). Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, who has studied and written widely on reactions to human death, proposes five phases of (the emotional level) of mourning for any significant loss:

  • Shock, numbness, disorientation, and/ or hysteria ("This can't be happening!");

  • Irrational pleading, fantasizing, or bargaining ("magic thinking") - e.g. "If I start taking out the garbage on time like my parents want, I know they won't divorce.";

  • Cycles of anger and rage. These surges may be felt or repressed and denied . If anger energy is felt, it may be expressed directly or indirectly, or unconsciously converted into a "safer" emotional/physical state (e.g. "heaviness," "depression," or "hyperactivity.")

       There is persuasive evidence that repressed anger can be stored in our muscles as "tight" jaw muscles (TMJ), shoulders, stomach, and "back pain." It also seems to contribute to some recurrent headaches, facial tics, teeth grinding, and stomach problems.

  • Cycles of deep sadness, apathy, despair, and (perhaps) depression. Again, these emotions may be felt or not, and expressed or not. By the way, medical research reports that tears of joy differ chemically from tears of pain because the latter contain compounds that cause stress.

        By ejecting  these chemicals, crying is one of our body's natural ways of staying balanced during times of trauma and endings. Implication - blocking our human reflex to weep stresses us, and is often a sign of a toxic grieving policy!

       The last phase of the emotional level of our normal grief process is …

  • Regaining stable emotional calmness, which allows us to resume our life interests, activities, and goals, and form selective new bonds. Periods of calm sadness (e.g. at anniversaries) may continue.

       We life-long losers can move through these phases in order, repeat or skip one or several phases for a while, or may move back and forth between the phases over time. We each evolve our own mourning style, so it's usually not helpful to "persuade" a loser to grieve "right," unless they're stuck.

The Mental Level of Good Grief

        While healthy losers are moving through these emotional phases, they also need to traverse a gradual shift from mental chaos to stable, credible understanding of common questions like these:

  • "Specifically, what have I lost? What has ended temporarily or completely for me?"

  • "Is it really gone for good?"

  • "How and why did my loss/es happen?"

  • "Am I to blame? Could I or others have prevented this ending?"

  • "Why did this happened to me? Why now?"

  • "How will this loss affect me and others important to me?"

  • "Can I replace what I've lost? How? At what cost or risk? Do I want to? When?"

        Family adults can gently and patiently help young losers and each other to find their own answers to these questions over time. Suggestions and patient empathic listening help more than giving mourners "right" answers.

        Lack of clear, realistic answers to questions like these can promote false-self wounds, and block the final grief step of loss-acceptance. Acknowledging realities about key losses can take a long time, because they can be so painful and/or slow to manifest ("I'll never have my birthday again the way we used to do it!")

        In their book "Second Chances," psychologist Judith Wallerstein and Sandra Blakeslee propose that it takes some kids 10-15 years to fully adjust to (accept) their complex set of tangible and abstract losses from parental separation, divorce, and family restructuring. I believe where this is true, it probably indicates that such kids are not living with pro-grief caregivers.

 The Spiritual Level of Good Grief

        A third level of healthy mourning has to do with (re)gaining a stable, nourishing spiritual faith in a trustworthy Higher Power, "Nature," and/or "the Universe." People overwhelmed by grief can lose a life-long trust in a benign Supreme Being, raging "How could you let this happen to me (or a beloved other)?" - and perhaps feeling great guilt for this "sacrilege." 

        They may alter or stop their worship (religious) practices, reject their God and perhaps Guardian Angel/s, stop participating in a religious community, and feel spiritually disconnected, betrayed, and abandoned. Non-believers can feel their skepticism in a loving Higher Power is obviously justified.

        For originally-faithful grievers, the third phase of healthy mourning is regaining or growing a new, firm faith that their Higher Power and/or "Nature" is trustworthy in ways that can't be humanly understood.

        Many factors seem to affect how important spiritual grief is to a child or adult, and how long it takes to move through it. It's possible that people with firm nourishing (vs. toxic) spiritual faith can often accept significant losses more quickly than non-believers. Some options to help move through the phases of spiritual mourning are prayer, reflection, and perhaps spiritual guidance and/or pastoral counseling.

       In healthy mourning, the concurrent mental, emotional, and spiritual levels and phases are eventually complete enough. Loss emotions and questions gradually subside, and refocusing on normal living returns. Significant needs created by the loss/es start to fill with new rituals, activities, goals, and bonds. Each person's unique needs, traits, and situations shape if and how this grief-completion occurs, and how long it takes. Because mourning involves mind, body, and spirit, conscious effort can't speed it up, but can promote it.

        Conversely, our three-level grief process can be unconsciously slowed or stopped. This seems (in my experience) to be very common in members of low-nurturance families. Incomplete grief adds greatly to ongoing, day-to-day personal and family distraction and stress. I believe it is one of five main reasons for typical divorcing-family and stepfamily surface problems. Does this premise seem credible?

       If good (effective) grief is vital for (a) personal health and growth, and (b) family welfare - what is needed to "do" it? Pause, breathe, and speak your answer to this question out loud before reading further. Test the theory that you probably have never been taught the...

  Seven Requisites For Healthy Mourning

        Premise: these factors are key ingredients for most kids, adults, and families:

1)  Significant progress in healing psychological wounds from low childhood nurturance. Without this, the other six factors probably won't help much. Project 1 in this nonprofit Web site focuses on wound-healing.

2)  Conscious, clear awareness of (a) the natural three-level mourning process we're all endowed with (above); (b) our tangible and invisible losses, and (c) their personal impacts on us and key others.

3)  Confidence in surviving our losses and their impacts, based on experience + realistic counsel + faith;

4)  Commitment to patient grieving as a healthy personal priority, without excessive guilt, ambivalence, or anxiety;

5)  Consistent inner and outer permissions to (a) feel and (b) express our natural shock, disbelief, rage, and despair - over and over; and to (c) turn our mental confusion into clarity and order, over time, by asking questions, and repeated venting, discussion, and meditating.

         Restated - grievers need a stable, pro-grief  (high-nurturance) environment to move steadily through the phases toward loss-acceptance;

6)  Motivation and opportunities to meditate, sort, feel, and process; and…

7)  All the time we need, and patience as we mourn a day at a time.
 
        Premise: the more of these factors that are missing for a loser, the more likely s/he will move slowly through, or be frozen in, accepting their inevitable life losses and moving on. What do you think?

Grieving

Work through the denial that hides the anger; ...

Work through the anger that hides the hurt; ...

Work through the hurt that hides the loss and loneliness; ...

Work through the loss and loneliness that hides the lack of self-worth; ...

Work through the lack of self worth that hides the total confusion; ...

Work through the total confusion that hides our unwillingness ...

to give up our own control and to surrender our lives to the Creator.

- Anonymous

Continue Project 5 by learning about inner and outer permissions to grieve well or selecting another article from this series. Note the slide-presentation version of this article.

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        Pause, breathe, and recall why you read this article. Did you get what you needed? If so, what do you need now? If not - what do you need? Is there anyone you want to discuss these ideas with? Who's answering these questions - your wise resident true Self, or "someone else"?

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