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Anticipating grief is never an easy thing. The thought that our loved one is going to die is not a consoling fact. Anticipatory grief is period during which a patient or family member expects to die. Related Article Tags: , , , , , , Grief is a feeling most people are likely to experience during the course of their lives. Often, such feelings begin after the death of a loved one or friend, and death can be a hard subject for those who are left behind after a family member or cherished friend passes away. In this article I provide 10 tips to help those who are suffering from grief and loss. Related Article Tags: , , , , , We all know that it is in one's highest good to grieve the loss of a relationship. Healthy grief releases feelings rather than allowing them to get stuck in the body. Healthy grief allows the griever to heal the loss and move on with life. Yet grief is not always healing. Many of us have known people who were stuck in their grief, seemingly locked into the past and unable to move forward in their lives. Related Article Tags: , , , , Loss is a normal part of life. With loss comes grief and grief is an essential part of the healing process. When your relationship comes to an end, there are various stages of grief in a breakup that you will go through. The process begins at the time when you come to learn about the breakup, and ends when you finally decide to move on with your life. The period between these two points is often filled with a range of emotions that can threaten your sanity. Here are some of the levels of emotions involved in a breakup. Related Article Tags: , , Getting over your break-up is a process. In this process, you will go through a number of emotional states. For instance, you may experience shock, denial, grief, and anger. You may also get into a rebound relationship. Related Article Tags: , , Sometimes we are just not aware that we have not processed grief. We know to process grief when someone dies. However, there are other events that happen that we may not be as aware of the need to grieve as we process these events. Related Article Tags: , , , , , Some brief comments about the grieving process wich can help someone to deal with their's or someone else's loss. Related Article Tags: , , , , , , ,
The funeral or graveside service is over and someone you work with is back on the job. Is there anything you can you do to help the person in the transition he or she is facing? Here are seven things to consider in supporting someone you work with and help him/her adjust to the loss. Related Article Tags: , , , , , Knowing these steps will make it possible for you to gauge your progress and perhaps help you get through it just a bit quicker. Here are the five stages of grief you may experience after a breakup. Related Article Tags: , , , , There are a number of old beliefs that we have learned about grief from the authority figures in our lives that have a major impact on the length of time we grieve and the amount of unnecessary suffering we endure. Here are several things you can control, in addition to questionable beliefs, that tend to prolong and exacerbate the grief process. Oftentimes our grief is so strong and alien to us that we fear we are losing our control and going crazy. Sometimes while grieving the loss of a loved one, we are forced to look at our own death. Many people on a healing path have found it extremely challenging to heal their shame. Yet when you understand the purpose of shame, you will be able to move beyond it. Related Article Tags: , , , , , If you mourn according to myth it means you have adopted false beliefs about grief and how to cope with the loss of a loved one. The solution is clear: obtain information to form beliefs that are true for you and discard old beliefs that were handed down to you when you were young. There are many myths about grief. Here are five of the most common and what you can do to reverse your thinking and reduce the unnecessary suffering they often inflict. Related Article Tags: , , , , There are three skills you can develop which are not commonly talked about in books on grief that can make a major difference in a positive outcome for your grief work. Try them as you deal with grief regardless of the type of loss you are mourning. Related Article Tags: , , , You can be healed and there are "Eight Healing Delivery Vehicles" God will use to do it for you. One of these ways requires no faith on the part of the one being healed. This is healing by the anointing.
The other seven requires one of more acts of faith on the part of the one being healed and/or the one ministering the healing. Of these two, faith is by far the most dependable. Related Article Tags: , , , , , , , , The entire context of Acts 3 and 4 is the healing of the lame man at the Temple Gate. This is the occasion of Peter's declaration that his level of power or holiness had nothing to do with it.
His actions, however, demonstrated that using Jesus' name for healing had everything to do with the healing of this helpless man. Related Article Tags: , , Thank God that our level of power or holiness has nothing to do with our ability to get our selves or our loved ones healed. Take the case of Peter.
In Acts 3, he used the name of Jesus to get the man lying at the Temple Gate healed. In so doing, he declared that his (Peter's) level of power or holiness had nothing to do with the healing of this helpless man. Related Article Tags: , , , , Some advice and insight for those who are experiencing the loss of a loved one. Related Article Tags: , , , , , , ,
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