September is National Suicide Prevention Month
Best selections from Grief Healing's X feed this week:
Grief therapists will tell you that there are no words to take the pain away from someone who is suffering, but there are things that well-meaning people say that can make grief worse. I’ve adapted some of these from the Coalition to Support Grieving Students, and I’ve also lived it. Navigating the universal yet personal pain of grief « SBJ
Advocacy can lead to feelings of empowerment and connection to others. Finding purpose and helping others naturally helps oneself. Advocacy can be a double-edged sword: People have different reactions to “going public” with a family story. Does Turning Pain Into Purpose Aid in Healing From Grief? « Psychology Today
Unfortunately, guilt is a natural and common component of grief. When someone you love dies, it’s only human to search for an explanation, to look at what you did or did not do, to dwell on the what if’s and if only’s. The Burden of Guilt in Grief « Grief Healing
Early grief is pain like you've never experienced. You never get over grief but it changes from anguish to melancholy. Once grief has started to mellow, it might be hard to remember what that early grief felt like. How Grief Can Be Like Childbirth « Psychology Today
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