Asking yourself about the grief process and overdoing this work is a great insight that is always good to examine. I hadn’t thought of the possibility of working so hard at grief that it could be a distraction from stepping into life, but it makes great sense and is a profound insight. The importance of taking time for 'recess' in the grief process « Taos News
I’m sure you have noticed a trend toward less use of both visitation and spending time with the body that once animated life. Yes, we continue to witness a trend toward shorter and shorter time frames of visitation and, all too often, no visitation at all. Affirming the Value of Elements of Meaningful Funerals « AfterTalk
When she learned that her mom's breast cancer would be terminal in December 2013, Forsythia used running and music as a way to cope. She'd play the pop ballad on repeat through the long cord of her headphones while she dashed back and forth from her home to a nearby park. The Healing Power of "Grief Runs" « Popsugar
There is a surprisingly large amount of research into why people are often more destroyed when we say goodbye to our dogs compared to when we lose our humans. The more I read, the more I understood. It’s a different love. It’s pure and unconditional and 100 per cent happiness. My dog’s death tore me up – the grief hit differently than when my mother and sister died « The Globe and Mail
Amy Lin, author of the memoir "Here After," on how the North American narrative of resilience traps grievers in a place where there's no space for them A Young Widow Rewrites the Conventional Narrative of Grief « Electric Lit
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