Writers' Community!
Home News Business Science & Technology Life Style
Life Home Health Religion Sports Do It Yourself Opinions Home & Family
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,645 Authors
48,627 Quality Articles
& 2,301 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Robert Melaccio, Sr. (6,477)
Camille Strate (1,366)
Tex Norman (4,446)
Jeff Brown (8,337)
David Pekrul (790)
Colleen Kettenhofen (719)
Joel Hirschhorn (427)
Joel Hendon (4,955)
Sandra E. Graham (2,244)
Terry Mitchell (3,001)
Mike Fak (6,396)
Walter Rhett (2,605)
Barbara Clark (479)
Teresa Ortiz (4,820)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
A Daughter's Final Farewell

Living With Regrets

I Found Harry

A Mental Makeover: How To Get Over Your Ex-Boyfriend

Not "Good" Bye Mum Just Bye For Now

To What Every the Future Brings

What I Would Tell My Mom

I will Not Forget.

How to Survive a Loss

The Last Show

Home » Categories » Personal » Grief / Loss » Seven Beliefs That Will Help You Cope with the Death of Your Loved One » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Seven Beliefs That Will Help You Cope with the Death of Your Loved One

Rated 3.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Louis LaGrand, Ph.D.
Submitted Thursday, May 29, 2008
Louis LaGrand, Ph.D. (546)
http://extraordinarygriefexperiences.com
Log in to become a member of Louis LaGrand, Ph.D.'s Fan Club!


Thoughts and beliefs-both of which are choices you make-are the underpinnings of the attitude you take toward loss. They are the major factors in how you will cope with your loss and to what extent you will experience additional and unnecessary suffering.

Regrettably, many of us have been heavily influenced to believe half-truths and false assumptions about death, loss, and reinvestment in life. These influences were deeply implanted in our psyches early in life by parents or other significant adult figures. The result leads to negative behaviors that complicate and increase the intensity of our grief work.

However, a common experience when we are confronted with major changes in life is we learn, grow in wisdom, and reevaluate the way we conduct our lives and think about the world around us. Frequently, without fully recognizing the transition, we alter beliefs some of which we have accepted for years as "the way it is."

Here are some of the beliefs that have helped others when grieving and have proven useful in adapting to a new life without the companionship of your loved one.

1. Believe coping well is a choice. You are not destined to follow some prearranged path in grief as you learned from observing friends or family members. You can choose how you wish to deal with the inevitable changes to be faced. Your ability and intent to choose, after wise deliberation and consultation, must never be minimized. Never forget: your actions are the result of your choices. It is your grief and your loss and you can steer your course through your dark night.

2. Believe there is no such thing as perfect grieving. Dump the word "perfect." You will see yourself as having fallen behind at times. Grief is like that, with ups and downs. But remember what the well known psychotherapist Thomas Moore wrote: " If you're leading a full life, you're going to fail some every day." Let it go. Don't get discouraged. See yourself doing better at the next opportunity. Here is where this next belief becomes key.

3. Believe in the importance of making new friends all your life. Start today looking for new friends. You are not giving up your old friends; you are adding to your circle of friends. Why? Because the research is abundantly clear: we are social beings, and friends are a crucial part of life and our physical and mental health. We need each other.

4. Believe in the critical importance of achieving. Doing something that ends in good results for you or someone else is powerful lifelong medicine. Getting something done is food for inner strength and self-esteem, which we all need. Set goals for various parts of your life and go for them. Start small, little successes first, and work your way up. No couch potato for you. You can't adjust to your loss by staying isolated and not accomplishing a little each day. Reach out.

5. Believe in giving your all. Not 95% or 99%, but 100% in what you seek to achieve. Effort is the engine leading to success and achievement in facing the pain of change and reinvesting in life. You must take unfettered action, and not in a half-hearted manner. Giving your best effort will result in progress, a little at a time.

6. Believe in always persisting. Like a pesky fly, keep at your task. When you falter on occasion, pick yourself up, reevaluate, and go back into the fray. You will reach your goal. Inside you inherently know what you have to do. Muster the courage to do it.

7. Believe that love never dies. Although changed, you will always have a relationship with your deceased loved one. Relationships don't die. You can talk to your loved one as you see fit just as millions of others do. Many pray to their loved ones or Higher Power. Remember what Gandhi, the Indian political and spiritual leader said: "Prayer is not an old woman's idle amusement. Properly understood and applied, it is the most powerful instrument of action."

There goes that word again-action. It all depends on what you choose to believe about yourself and where you can go. The power of your choices, the friends you make, the failures you bounce back from, your untiring efforts and commitment to action will assure you that you can adapt to the next chapter of your life. Allow the loss you have experienced and the changes you face bring new awareness, insight, and inner strength.

Dr. LaGrand is a grief counselor and the author of eight books, the most recent, Love Lives On: Learning from the Extraordinary Encounters of the Bereaved. He is known world-wide for his research on the Extraordinary Experiences of the bereaved (after-death communication phenomena) and is one of the founders of Hospice of the St. Lawrence Valley, Inc. His monthly ezine-free website is www.extraordinarygriefexperiences.com .



This author of this Article has choosen to make this article available with free reprint rights.
Click here to copy this article.

Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Louis LaGrand, Ph.D.'s Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 28 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Thursday, May 29, 2008
View other articles written by Louis LaGrand, Ph.D. (546)


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
Nine Ways to Cope with Loneliness after the Death of a Loved One

A Mental Makeover: How To Get Over Your Ex-Boyfriend

The Wages of War

What Size Underwear Do You Wear?

Some Tips For Getting Over Your Past

Dealing With The Death of A Loved One

Saying Goodbye To An Old Friend -- Love and Death and Broken Hearts

What to Say to the Victim of a Violent Crime

Dealing With The Painful Loss Of A Loved One

Higher Than An Eagle

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2008 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company