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Archive for the ‘Grief Resources’ Category

04[1]Visit “Your Tribute” website that offers online grief and funeral resources. As a contributing author, you can read my article in the resource section of recent articles, “It’s OK to be depressed…sometimes“. This website is filled with resources such as: Memorial Quotes, Funeral Info Mobile App, Funeral Etiquette, Funeral Poems and Songs, How to Write Sympathy Messages, etc.

Perhaps you don’t need this resource now, but maybe you know someone that does.

It makes the hard work a little easier.

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I found this website WHAT’S YOUR GRIEF?  through Twitter and wanted to share this article on Self-Care:

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Self-Care tactic #752: Lock yourself in the closet until the crying stops.

Self-Care for the Rest of Us

Posted by Eleanor Haley on Feb 25, 2013  at What’s Your Grief?

Self-Care is a phrase thrown around quite a bit in the mental health field. As in, self-care is important for individuals dealing with grief in order to avoid nervous breakdown; or as in, it is important for mental health professionals to practice self-care in order to prevent burnout and continue to function in the normal world.

Both of these statements are true, I don’t dispute them for a second. Still, whenever I hear someone talk about the importance of self-care my eyes glaze over and I vacantly nod my head and say “Oh yes…self care…super duper important”, while inside my head I’m thinking “uh oh, they’re starting to talk about self-care…just walk away…no one will notice”.

For those of you who don’t even know what self-care is, you’re not alone. When I set out to write this post I asked a group of family if they knew what it was and my brother responded, “yeah, it’s like getting manicures and stuff.” I was the only one in the room who knew he was wrong.

When we talk about self-care, we are referring to efforts towards healthy lifestyle and stress management. This is something I fully support, what irks me is that it’s often prescribe it in such an un-relatable way that I can’t get behind it.

As a working mother of two, I reject the idea that in order to take care of myself I must give up bad habits like Lifetime Movie Marathons and adopt healthy lifestyle choices like organic diets, daily exercise, and yoga. Lifetime Movies help me to escape and, although I understand yoga and exercise are good,they require perseverance and hard work, resources which those most in need of self care – the distressed, over stressed, overworked, anxious, angry and depressed – may not have in abundance.

If you fall into this category, please don’t give up on self-care. Not until you have a true understanding of what it requires and have considered how it might be realistic for YOU.

Here’s a word for you…BAR

Woah, not so fast, put that bottle down. In this context BAR is an acronym that stands for…

Balance, Awareness, and Realism

…let me explain

Balance:
Balance can have quite a few implications when it comes to self-care. It could mean that you try to maintain a good balance between your needs and the needs of others (your children, your work, your significant other). Or it could mean finding a balance between coping strategies that are typically thought of as negative (staying in bed all day, drinking every night) and coping that may have a more positive impact on function (going on daily walks, seeking therapy).

The basic underlying idea is that you should appropriate a decent amount of time to things that will make you feel better by increasing health and happiness and decreasing stress. Your efforts might be as deliberate as scheduling an hour to play tennis, or as subtle as allowing yourself a 15 minute break to put on your headphones and listen to music when things get tough.

Awareness:
After a stressful event like a death, I suggest looking introspectively at how you are coping every so often. This can be hard because it means having to be honest with yourself and possibly say, “I’m not doing that great”.

If you find yourself saying “I’ve let my drinking get out of control”, “I’ve spent too much time on the couch”, “My eating habits have become very unhealthy”, “I spend more time crying and feeling anxious than I think is normal” then it may be time to make lifestyle changes or get help.

It should be noted, when you are at your lowest self awareness can be hard to come by. It may be hard to be objective so consider talking things over with some of your more rational and trusted friends and family.

Realism:
This one is simple. It means that it’s important to set realistic expectations for yourself; go easy on yourself and chose coping methods that are realistic for you. The things that enrich your life may be totally different than the things someone else might choose. Take some time to make a list of the things you enjoy, and strategies you might realistically utilize to reduce stress.

Here are a few examples. As you will see, self-care doesn’t have to be complicated and can include any variety of different activities.

1. Go outside:
o Get 20 minutes of sunlight and/or fresh air
o Take a walk
o Garden
o Open the windows
o Be active: bike, hike, explore

2. Put on headphones and listen to music

3. Read a book: Choose books that will help you escape (mysteries & romance)

4. Watch a movie

5. Deliberately unplug:
o Turn off your phone
o Shut down your computer
o Dont respond to e-mails after work

6. Get a hobby:
o Journal
o Scrapbook
o Photography
o Ceramics
o Stamp collecting
o Cooking/Baking

7. Get enough sleep/Take a Nap

8. Yoga/meditation
o Practice Mindfulness

9. Make a date with yourself

10. Make a date with family or friends

11. Do things that make you feel fulfilled:
o Volunteer time
o Raise funds
o Donate items

12. Do things that make you laugh

13. Get organized

14. Find out more about nutrition and make positive dietary changes

15. Don’t overbook: take a look at your schedule. What can you eliminate?

16. Take a bath

17. Find solitude

18. Find silence

19. Slow down

20. Find ways to feel close to your loved ones memory

What are some ways that you take care of yourself?

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OpenToHopeLogoTransparent1251

#10 I didn’t care what anyone thought about how I grieved:

Grief made me go crazy for a while. I was selfish and self-centered. Thankfully, my family and friends supported me through and took care of my children until I came to my senses.

#9 I prayed:

I soon realized that I couldn’t do it on my own. I needed God’s help. (Sounds like a 12 step program!)In my prayers, I not only talked to God, but I learned how to listen to Him and heed His advice.

#8 I had to rethink my priorities:

Grief taught me what was most important in my life. God became my number one priority. I then treasured my family and relationships that I still had here. My two daughters were my main concern.

#7 Time doesn’t heal all wounds:

It’s not about time. There are people who are still living in grief 17 years later. Unless you do the grief work, with God’s help, you’ll continue to grieve. God is our healer who helps to heal our wounds.

#6 My loved one was only part of my life, not my whole life:

Traveling to visit family and friends brought me my first moments of joy. Many I knew before I even knew my loved one. I realized there was a lot more to my life than just my married life.

#5 Joy and pain coexist:

As I found myself feeling more joyful, a special day would bring back the pain. A birthday, a holiday, an anniversary day, my daughters’ dance recitals, my daughters’ graduations. It’s OK. The pain makes me remember the beautiful memories.

#4 God uses suffering for good to help us grow:

God has used me as a witness to bring others to Christ through my grief.

“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” (Romans 8:28)

#3 Life is temporary here:

Some day, I will lose another loved one. I will grieve again. But I have faith that my eternal home will be in Heaven. It will be a permanent place to reunite with my loved ones that have gone before.

#2 God is in control:

I’ve surrendered my life over. God’s in control of everything anyway. There’s no “What ifs…?” My life and everyone else’s life is in His hands. I trust He knows best. He’ll always have the last word!

And the #1 lesson I’ve learned from grief is:

# 1 It’s time to serve others and pass on the comfort that I received:

“Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God.” (2 Corinthians 1:3-4)

This is a favorite post of mine that I wrote awhile back. It’s also published on an on-line website, Open to Hope Foundation. The website is to inspire hope after any kind of loss.

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WHAT IS GRIEFSHARE?

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GriefShare is a friendly, caring group of people who will walk alongside you through one of life’s most difficult experiences. You don’t have to go through the grieving process alone.

GriefShare seminars and support groups are led by people who understand what you are going through and want to help. You’ll gain access to valuable GriefShare resources to help you recover from your loss and look forward to rebuilding your life.

There are thousands of GriefShare grief recovery support groups meeting throughout the US, Canada and in over 10 other countries. There’s one meeting near you! Find one close to you!

Check out GriefShare’s website: www.griefshare.org for more information.

I am currently leading a group in the Atlanta, GA area through my church, Northpoint Community Church. The group meets weekly for 10 sessions. If you’re not ready to join a group, register to get GriefShare’s  free daily e-mails for a year. These are 365 daily e-mails to help you through the grieving process.

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Flight Attendant with an Oxygen Mask

This blog post is shared from a website called SoulSeeds. This website offers inspiration for all people in their growth and needs. In this article, I find it not only helpful but also necessary to take care of ourselves FIRST when grieving. Sometimes we may have to be selfish for a while and put the oxygen mask on ourselves first before we can give oxygen to our children or others.  You can also follow SoulSeeds on Twitter for great tweets!

Feed Your Soul by Geneen Roth

Geneen Roth wrote the outstanding book, Women, Food and God which was featured on Oprah. We’re pleased to include Geneen’s work on Soulseeds Seed Exchange. This article was first published in Good Housekeeping.

There are some things in life you take for granted: Your children will outlive you. No matter how tough it gets, you won’t poison your spouse with arsenic-laced toothpaste. And if you have a best friend, you will attend her wedding.

But life sometimes upsets our most basic assumptions. And although I haven’t resorted to the arsenic (yet), I did have this surprise: My best friend from college got married today and I wasn’t there. Never in a million years did I think I would miss her wedding. We’d been talking about it since we were 18. And yet, when it came down to deciding about making the trip from California to New York, I did something radical, something I rarely do: I took my own needs into account.

I stepped away from my notions of what a good person would do, what any loyal friend would do, and considered the facts: I’d just returned from teaching an exhilarating but exhausting weeklong retreat; I had a broken ankle and a sprained back and could barely walk; my friend decided to get married rather suddenly and told me she wasn’t expecting me to come. And I realized that although I would miss seeing her walk down the aisle if I didn’t go, I would be a hobbling, exhausted wreck if I did. So I stayed home, sent champagne, and wrote my friend and her new husband a wedding story. It was an agonizing decision but not nearly as painful as the tale I told myself about it: If I don’t go to my best friend’s wedding — the very friend who held my hair back the night I drank a bottle of Cold Duck and threw up on the sidewalk — people will finally discover how selfish I am and I will lose every friend I have. I will spend my dying days alone, dribbling Diet Coke on my chin with no friends or family around. As soon as I realized I’d made a leap from taking care of myself to visions of dying alone, dribbling and friendless, I understood that I considered looking out for my own needs a radical concept — so radical that it scared me to (a pathetic, lonely, and potentially sticky) death.

I should know better. In working with tens of thousands of women over the last two decades, I’ve found that there is a whole set of beliefs called “the bad things that will happen if I take care of myself.” I’ve heard things such as, “My son will choke on a fish bone the minute I leave him alone and take some time for myself.” “My husband won’t be able to make friends without me if I stay home from this party and rest.” “My friend will hate me if I don’t make brownies for her bake sale.”

Think about this: Do you feel it is right to put yourself at the center of your own life, or is your secret fear that if you consider your own needs, you’ll alienate the people you love and end up homeless, rifling through old chicken bones in a dark alley? Are you afraid that a “me first” attitude will get you drummed out of the “good people” club?

Most of us secretly believe that good people, especially women, take care of others first. They wait until everyone else has a plateful and then take what’s left. Unfortunately, most of us make decisions based on our ideas of who we think we should be, not on who we actually are. The problem is, when we make choices based on an ideal image of ourselves — what a good friend would do, what a good mother would do, what a good wife would do — we end up having to take care of ourselves in another way.

Enter food. When you don’t consider your real needs, you will likely fill the leftover emotional hunger with food. (Or another abused substance. Or shopping. But most of us opt for food.) You eat in secret. You eat treats whenever you can, because food is the one way, the only way, you nourish yourself. You eat on the run because you believe that you shouldn’t take time for lunch; there’s too much work to do. You eat the éclair, the doughnut, the cake, all the while knowing this isn’t really taking care of yourself. But to really take care of yourself, you have to think of yourself first.

“Is that possible?” you ask. “What about my children? I’d die for them.” Have you ever considered why, on an airplane, the flight attendant tells you to put on your own oxygen mask first, before you help your children? It’s because your kids’ well-being depends on it. If you aren’t grounded, present, calm, and able to breathe, there is no one to take care of them.

What would your life look like if you acknowledged the truth that working nonstop for 10 hours, taking care of other people, leaves you so spent and weary that there really isn’t much left of you for your kids, let alone yourself? What would your life look like if you realized that you need to set aside time every day to fill yourself up — even if it’s only by taking a few 15-minute breaks during which you stare at nothing or go outside or lie down? What would the pace of your life be if you went on “soul time” instead of clock time, even just a little?

It’s possible. A few days ago, I spoke with a first-time mother. Her baby son had colic, and she was completely exhausted. She was so afraid she wouldn’t be there when he needed her that she couldn’t sleep even when he was napping or with her husband. And she was turning to food to calm herself down. I asked her what it would be like to do something very simple for herself: to sit down and breathe. That’s all. No big deal. Nothing to achieve. Just let the body do what it was already doing and give herself a break. She said she could try that. She just breathed.

At the end of five minutes, I asked her how she felt. She said she was relieved, immediately calmer. She said that since she’d had her baby, she had forgotten all about herself and her needs, and while some of that was natural (“I’m so in love with him,” she said; “I’ve never known love like this before”), she was not serving him best by exhausting herself. She said that caring for herself was doable — maybe not in the same ways she did before she was a mother, but in new ways. Taking small rests. Eating well. Going outside for even five minutes while he naps. “I can do this,” she said. “I can treat myself with the same kind of care that I give him.”

“Now you’re talking,” I said. “And the better you take care of yourself, the more he will know as he grows up that it’s fine for him to take care of himself, too.”

If you operate on what you believe a good mother/partner/friend would do and you leave yourself — what you need, how you feel — out of the equation, your relationships will suffer.

I’m here to tell you that cherishing yourself by making yourself a priority in your own life is possible. You can take care of your needs and your relationships with family and friends can thrive. I know, because I am making this my daily practice, and I am confident I will not go out either alone or dribbling.

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w.pWhen a loved one is diagnosed with cancer, it’s natural to feel worried, sad, anxious or depressed. It is difficult news to process, and these emotions are a completely natural reaction.

Everyone will grieve in a different way. Some losses are especially great, and the grieving period will last a long time. As long as the feelings are acknowledged, dealt with in a healthy manner and do not interfere with a person’s normal responsibilities, this is not a problem. Each person will reach acceptance in their own time.

During this time, cancer patients and their loved ones may turn to support groups, meditation and journaling as coping mechanisms for their grief. Other helpful techniques include:

·        Relaxation exercises

·        Physical activity

·        Pet therapy

·        Respite care (for caregivers)

·        Volunteer work

·        Art therapy (or other creative outlets)

These options can help people avoid social withdrawal, negative attention-getting behaviors and other emotional complications that can occur when grief is not properly managed.

In some cases, the grief is too much to bear alone. For these incidences, professional support may be necessary.

Professional Support for Grief

As isolating as the experience can be, it’s crucial for families to remember that they are not going through this alone. Professional support is available, and it can make the grieving process a little bit easier.

Many hospitals employ grief counselors or therapists. These professionals are specially trained help patients and their families navigate through difficult post-diagnosis emotions.

Hospice organizations also provide access to counselors, social workers and volunteer clergy members. Hopsice programs typically extend their emotional support services to family members; in many cases, loved ones are welcome to participate in grief counseling for up to a year after the patient passes away. Some families even stay in touch with their Hospice providers after they have officially left the program.

Author bio: Faith Franz has spent nearly two years researching and writing for The Mesothelioma Center. As an advocate for alternative medicine, she encourages patients to explore all of the treatment options that could potentially save their life.

This post came to me from Jasmine McCarthy who is the Awareness Coordinator for the Mesothelioma Center (Asbestos.com). The site also offers informaion on lung cancer (types, treatments, tests, etc.). Mesothelioma is a terminal disease and grief unfortunately strikes many mesothelioma patients’ families. This prompted the center to create a section on the website purely devoted to the grieving process.

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