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Secrets of Overcoming Complicated Grief _ Counselor Education
Episode 1014
Published 1 year, 5 months ago
Description
Introduction
Understanding Grief and Loss
- Definitions
- Types of Losses
Complicated Grief and Prolonged Grief Disorder
- Complicated Grief:
- Grief that does not follow a typical pattern and remains unresolved, leading to significant distress and impairment.
- The Inventory of Complicated Grief can be used six months after a loss to assess if grief is resolving as expected.
- Prolonged Grief Disorder:
- Newly added to the DSM-5-TR, applies specifically to grief following the death of a close person.
- Symptoms overlap with complicated grief but are strictly related to the death of a person.
Risk Factors for Complicated Mourning
- Survivor Characteristics:
- Age: Younger individuals may struggle more due to egocentric thinking and difficulty understanding the big picture.
- Physical and Mental Health: Chronic pain, mental health issues, and physical reminders of the loss can complicate grief.
- Cognitive Understanding: A person’s ability to comprehend the loss and its implications.
- Personality and Character Traits: Traits like abandonment anxiety, insecure attachment, or codependency can complicate mourning.
- Socioeconomic Status: Financial stress can exacerbate grief.
- Spiritual Factors: Beliefs about life after death and the meaning of loss.
- Nature of the Loss:
- Trauma: Losses that are traumatic, unexpected, or involve multiple losses can complicate mourning.
- Circumstances: The context of the loss, such as a sudden or violent death, impacts grief.
- Resources: The availability of support immediately after the loss can influence the grief process.
- Relationship with the Lost Person: The depth and quality of the relationship, as well as the role the person played in the survivor’s life.
Tasks for Grief Resolution
- Acknowledge the Reality of the Loss: Accept that the loss has occurred and its implications.
- Manage Emotional Responses: Engage with the pain of the loss while being supported physically, emotionally, and spiritually.
- Redefine the Relationship with the Lost Person or Thing: Shift from a present-focused relationship to one of memory.
- Develop a New Self-Identity: Adapt to life without the lost person or thing.
- Find Meaning in the Loss: Explore the purpose and significance of the loss in the survivor's life.
- Experience Continued Support: Maintain supportive connections with others.
Models of Grieving
- Wolfelt’s Six Reconciliation Tasks:
- Acknowledge the reality of the loss.
- Move toward the pain of the loss while being nurtured.
- Convert the relationship with the lost entity to one of memory.
- Develop a new self-identity without the lost entity.
- Find meaning in the loss.
- Experience a continued supportive presence.
- Rando’s Three Phases of Grievin