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The Loneliness of Grief 

The Grief Channel
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Grief can be one of the loneliest and most isolating experiences we'll ever have. Often, the people we value the most withdraw from us, because they simply don't know what to say or how to provide support.
As we adjust to painful new realities without a loved one, family relationships can fray. Sometimes, we don't feel able to connect with others and just don't have the energy or motivation to engage in the things we usually love.
Join us in this session with Simon Blake OBE, Chair of Hospice UK's Dying Matters campaign to look at how we can navigate these feelings of loneliness and disconnection, considering how we can create the right kind of community around us to get us through the darkest times.
Simon is joined by psychotherapist Julia Samuel MBE; Merissa Nathan Gerson (author of Forget Prayers, Bring Cake); Anneke Vedder, a psychotherapist at Utrecht University who is exploring the mutual connection between loneliness and bereavement; Mike Gray, who found support from Independent Age to manage the loneliness he faced after the death of his wife five years ago, and Priscilla Nkwenti who recently retired as CEO of Health Inequalities Charity BHA for Equality and who shared her experience of grief when her younger brother passed in the publication, Sisters and Brothers.

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14 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 5   
@tastethebass5622
@tastethebass5622 Год назад
I have found my age to be an added source of loneliness while grieving for my parent. My parent died when I was in my early thirties. It was and still is, ten years later, difficult to find anyone in my age group who has suffered a parental death to talk to about it. Indeed, none of my friends in the same age group have even had a parent suffer from a serious illness let alone a terminal one. If I was grieving in my fifties or later I would have more peers going through this type of grief. At the same time as a mature adult you don't get the sympathy and attention that people in their twenties or younger ages quite rightly receive. Of course, this is partly the result of more people living longer in better health, but when your parent doesn't you find that you are in the minority grieving in your thirties and forties with less support or sympathy offered by other adults. And even more lonely if you are also single and without children of your own.
@griefchannel
@griefchannel Год назад
Thank you for sharing your experience with us and I'm very sorry for your loss.
@sapphire6769
@sapphire6769 Год назад
Hi How are you ? I recently lost my dad im 42 really struggling like you most people i know have their parents
@hannahofbauer180
@hannahofbauer180 Год назад
amazing help and advice
@griefchannel
@griefchannel Год назад
Glad it was helpful
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