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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 13 page paper examines the stages of grief as they have been described by people such as Elisabeth Kubler-Ross; it also examines other models of the grief process; the way people of different ages react to death; and whether it is better to die quickly or slowly. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
13 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVGrief.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
stages of grief as they have been described by people such as Elisabeth Kubler-Ross; it also examines other models of the grief process; the way people of different ages react
to death; and whether it is better to die quickly or slowly. The "Five Stages of Grief" - Classic Model Grief is not an event, but a process;
a way of coming to terms with loss. Although we usually think of grief in connection with the death of a loved one, in reality we grieve for many
things: the loss of a job; a difficult change; a move; the death of a beloved pet; a divorce; even kids leaving home for the first time can cause
a period of mourning. However, no matter what they cause, grief is something common to us all as humans. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross is famous for the work she
did on death and dying, and it was from her that we got the idea of stages of grief. In brief, the stages are "denial, anger, bargaining, depression and
acceptance" (Callahan, et al, 2005). These stages are necessary if we are to make sense of the loss and find the strength to go on with our lives after
it, no matter what were dealing with. The stages are "tools to help us frame and identify what we may be feeling. But they are not stops on
some linear timeline in grief" (Callahan, et al, 2005). In other words, the grief process is different for everyone; not everyone will go through the stages in order, nor
will they go through all of them, and some people will go through several stages simultaneously (Callahan, et al, 2005). They may "cycle" back and forth from one to
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