Kubler Ross identified five stages that bereaved people often go through. It's not universal, it depends on your personality, your spirituality and your culture, and even when people go through all the stages it's not always in the same order, and the stages can overlap ~ I mean, people go back and forth among them.
This is in her observation the most common pathway of bereavement:
1. Denial. The person is in a state of shock, and is apt to say "I can't believe it". It's quite common, especially when the death is sudden or young. Shock is most likely, and most likely to last some time, when the death is caused by suicide or violence or is of one's child.
2. Anger. The person is angry with, for example, the dead person for leaving them; with God for letting, or making, the death happen; or with themselves for not doing something/enough to prevent it.
3. Bargaining. The least rational of Kubler-Ross's five stages. The bereaved says to themselves, their loved ones, or to God "if I...." in the ungrounded hope of somehow making the death go away. People quite often go to spiritualist churches at this "stage".
4. Sadness. The bereaved comes to feel the full impact of their loss, and this is sorrowful. Sadness can of course be expressed in many behaviours such as tears, listlessness, thoughts of suicide, not eating, not paying the bills, not caring for pets, friends or loved ones....... and it can be suppressed. Sadness (or indeed other feelings such as anger) suppressed at a time of bereavement can resurface years or decades later - usually as a result of some trigger, which may be proportionate (e.g. another bereavement) but can also be seemingly relatively small such as the theft of a handbag.
5. Acceptance. The bereaved mentally allows their loss and begins to open up to life -- often including new possibilities (house, job, partner, spiritual path, etc).
2007-02-23 05:56:13
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answer #1
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answered by MBK 7
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i'm not sure how effectual it relatively is to "count quantity them up" and cause them to 4. The grieving curve is an extremely own element - and would contain many greater levels: - Guilt many times being a great one is the guy has been hoping this would take place to place a enjoyed out of discomfort as an occasion. additionally undergo in strategies that there are no longer any policies as to which order those issues play out in. Denial is often the 1st - alongside with ask your self / yearning etc - yet that's relatively not generally happening - enormously if the death were estimated for an prolonged volume of time. while you're after an answer for some homework / quiz, thern i think "Denial, Anger, melancholy (melancholy no longer often technically superb), attractiveness/Miving on" From a usefulk attitude, factor in Guilt, experience of isolation, and extremely some others. stability > experience (loss) > Instability > Denial > Anger > Bargaining (please enable or no longer that's me quite etc) > melancholy / (melancholy??) > testing/coping mechanisms tried out > attractiveness > shifting on. Google for "Grieving curve" or "Kubler Ross" to come across greater guidance approximately this if it relatively is significant to you.
2016-10-16 02:06:01
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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denial
anger
bargaining
depression
acceptance
these are the five stages of grief. they don't have to be in this order but this is the usual way they come down.
2007-02-19 21:46:14
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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