Offer and acceptance

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    Anticipatory Grief

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    Reactions to a loss can be physical and psychological. Possibly, experience loss of emotional control, anger, unfinished business, and helplessness may erode the soul. A person may also experience grief over the loss of belongings other than the individual, such as future dreams, hopes, detachments, and attachments to the loss that’s associated with an altering roles and family structures. This is when the bereaved person shows no signs of grief or acts as though nothing has transpired. These…

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    that provides services for individuals with incurable illnesses and their loved ones. To obtain contact information, services provided or local agencies visit their website HearttoHeartHospice.com. The twenty-six Heart to Heart Hospice locations offers nursing and physician care, social services, occupational and speech therapy, homemaker services and pain management control to individuals with terminal…

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    According to Kubler-Ross (2013), the grieving process is comprised of five formal stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and finally acceptance. The first stage, denial, actually enables the person to initially endure an incredible loss. While it may seem counterintuitive, denial is actually a critical aspect of the healthy healing process. It is comparable to entering a stage of shock. The act of denial actually is a protective mechanism that helps a person cope with the overwhelming…

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    Introducing Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’s “Stages of Grief” (Kubler-Ross, 1969, pp. 37-49) can provide tools with which help to identify and communicate feelings. Kubler-Ross’ model of the stages of grief begins with Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance, and can be applied to most circumstances involving loss (Torrey, 2016), such as divorce ( (Positive Parenting Court Educational Class, 2003), parental alienation and even familial abduction. Another model incorporated in…

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    Grief is an emotion we all experience in our life. Grief is the emotional response to the pain of a loss. It i s the reflection of a connection that has been broken.(Kubler& Ross 2005). Most important, grief is an emotional, spiritual, and psychological journey to healing. (Kessler & Kubler-Ross 2005). In our childhood we realize at some point we will die, and not only will we die but those around us will die someday too. This is the beginning of anticipatory grief, Fear of the unknown…

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    At some point in a person's life they are faced with grief. It may be due to death or a breakup. However, it is how they handle it that shows who they really are. In Charles Dickens Great Expectations two characters are faced with grief and handle it very differently. Joe Gargery, Pip’s father, had and an awful childhood and decided to not let another child go through what he did. Ms. Havisham was jilted on her wedding day and decided to stop living. They have both had agony in their life and…

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    It has been noted that acceptance does not imply that you have the answers but allows the person the freedom to express themselves and provides a safe place to morn. I believe that praying without ceasing is one of the most power suggestions within this article. In the past I…

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    “Most people are unaware that our losses affect us forever, since they cause us to see the world and ourselves differently. The task of discovering ‘Who am I now?’ and finding our own path to healing represents one of the greatest challenges of the grieving process,” this quotes represents the thoughts of Susan Berger in “The Five Ways We Grieve: Finding Your Personal Path to Healing After the Loss of a Loved One.” Truly the expression in the quotes provides a glimpse into the realness of the…

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    can be no true hope. The most a non-Christian can hope for is to move past the pain and rebuild a life that will eventually end without hope. For the Christian, acceptance is knowing that God will be part of this life and there is a future life. Christian should do not grieve as those who have no hope [1 Thessalonians 4:13]. Acceptance, the final stage of grief, does not mean the griever is now “pleased” with the loss. Why would the Christian be pleased when God is not pleased with many things…

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    William Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, is a tragic story about the struggles of a prince named Hamlet who seeks to avenge his father’s death. Hamlet is so determined to sabotage his uncle, who has taken his father’s crown and is responsible for the crime, that Hamlet himself increasingly becomes insane. Family bonds and friendships are broken as death begins to claim their loved ones and vengeance becomes the primary mindset of the characters. As the play progresses, three prominent themes of death…

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