Death

ebook Death

By John Mcload

cover image of Death

Sign up to save your library

With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.

   Not today

Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Download Libby on the App Store Download Libby on Google Play

Search for a digital library with this title

Title found at these libraries:

Library Name Distance
Loading...
Death and grief isn't something that may be compartmentalized. It's inconceivable to tell somebody that he or she will grieve for 3 months or 6 months or a couple of years before beginning to feel good. There's no set time frame for you to mourn your loved one. Mourning is a procedure, not an event. The 1st stage of grief, as described by an alternate view, is what is referred to as numbness, a state where the grief-stricken merely go through the motions of daily life and tasks. They literally feel numb and void inside. There is little thought devoted to anything besides their grief.
The 2nd stage is disorganization. This is where sorrow deepens and the grieving actively mourn the loss of their loved ones. This is like the depression stage of grief as defined originally. The last stage of grief is reorganization. This is likewise similar to acceptance and the stage when the grief-stricken start to feel emotionally solider and "normal."
When will you begin to feel better? These levels of grief are only possibilities and both have their merits. They try to clarify and universalize the grief experience, as this is the one thing that we all have in common - death, and confronting the death of other people.
Everybody will mourn the loss of a loved one differently. Anybody who's ever experienced mourning will identify with one, both, or a combination of the 2 possibilities on the stages of sorrow.
Funerals are for the living. While that might appear to be a statement of the perceptible, it's a crucial fact to remember in the designing of a funeral. Nothing in the funeral will bring the departed back to life or make sorrow disappear. What the funeral or memorial service may do, all the same, is let mourners start healing by sharing their loss, showing their feelings, and commemorating a unequalled and precious life. A funeral service is told apart from a memorial service by the presence or absence of the body of the departed. If the body is there, the service is called a funeral; when the body is absent, the service is a memorial. Either sort of service is suitable for a burial or a cremation. A funeral service might be held in a funeral parlor, a church building, or in the family house, whereas a memorial service might be held anyplace.
The funeral or memorial is a chance for loved ones and friends to reflect on the life and observe the memory of the deceased. Beyond what is ordained by religious or cultural custom, funerals may be as unique as the people they honor.
The opening move, then, in designing a funeral service is to ascertain whether or not the funeral will include a religious service.
Death