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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines the five stages of death/dying by Elizabeth Kubler-Ross. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAstg.rtf
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valid tools in dealing with death. It is something that has even been connected with other kinds of loss that do not involve death but involve other emotional and personal
concerns. The following paper examines her five stages and then examines how knowing these five stages could be used by a counselor. The Five Stages of Death/Dying by
Kubler-Ross The five stages can be broken down into very brief titles: "Denial and isolation...Anger...Bargaining...Depression...Acceptance" (Kubler-Ross five stages of dying, 2007). In more depth the first stage essentially involves ignoring
the truths about the impending death, telling themselves it is not really happening and isolating themselves. In the second stage a person becomes angry that such a thing could happen,
whether it is happening to them or someone else they love. With bargaining people often envision such things as "I will be good if I dont have to die" or
"just let me live to see my daughter married." It is a sense of bargaining with the inevitable. Then comes the stage when the person is depressed about what is
happening, saddened because at this point they know there is nothing they can do. They will be withdrawn and perhaps become deeply depressed because of the truth. In the end
comes acceptance. In the case of a person dying they accept the fact they will die and sometimes may be happy for the end to the suffering. This is also
the case for the people watching a loved one dying as they accept the truth. Counseling With an understanding of this
particular theory concerning death/dying one must, in counseling others, clearly note the following: "Weve all experienced grief. Weve all felt those intense rolling waves of emotion. But, do we all
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