Grieving: A Beginner's Guide

Grieving: A Beginner's Guide

by JerushaHullMcCormack (Author)

Synopsis

This book is designed to help those who have lost someone through death -- to imagine the path before them. There is no sure route on how to grieve. Jerusha McCormack provides instead a series of signposts by which we may find our own path to a new life. We are all amateurs at grief, she writes, it comes to us all; we must all go through it. To treat grief as a problem to be fixed, or (worse still) to medicalize it, is to rob us of the extraordinary privilege of encountering this experience on our terms: for each of us has our own way of grieving, and each of us has something special to learn from the process. For anyone coping with how to grieve, or dealing with loss.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 148
Publisher: Paraclete Press
Published: 01 Mar 2006

ISBN 10: 1557254931
ISBN 13: 9781557254931

Media Reviews
Your Rights as a Person in Grief
o You have a right to remain silent.
o You have a right to cry, anytime and anywhere.
o You have a right to express you grief in ways that seem appropriate to you.
o You have a right to talk about your dead spouse/child/sibling/parent/friend as often as you would wish and on whatever occasions you wish to do so.
o You have a right to negotiate for time out from the usual schedules and obligations, so that you may honor your grief and heal.
o You have a right to complete your grieving in your own time and in your own way, without being subject to the schedules ' and expectations of others.,
o You have a right to assert the centrality of the experience of grieving, within your own life and as it affects the lives of others. Jerusha Hull McCormack Health June 5, 2006

Working from the theory that it takes one to know one, McCormack - widowed while her children were still young-writes a clear-eyed account of the many emotions and situations a grieving person may encounter.

She covers so much ground in such a little book that the reader could devour it quickly in hours or spend weeks reading it slowly, savoring each bit of wisdom.

Anyone who is grieving or anyone who knows a grieving person will find hope and support in this small book.
Publishers Weekly January 20, 2006


Your Rights as a Person in Grief
o You have a right to remain silent.
o You have a right to cry, anytime and anywhere.
o You have a right to express you grief in ways that seem appropriate to you.
o You have a right to talk about your dead spouse/child/sibling/parent/friend as often as you would wish and on whatever occasions you wish to do so.
o You have a right to negotiate for time out from the usual schedules and obligations, so that you may honor your grief and heal.
o You have a right to complete your grieving in your own time and in your own way, without being subject to the schedules ' and expectations of others.,
o You have a right to assert the centrality of the experience of grieving, within your own life and as it affects the lives of others. Jerusha Hull McCormack Health June 5, 2006

Working from the theory that it takes one to know one, McCormack - widowed while her children were still young-writes a clear-eyed account of the many emotions and situations a grieving person may encounter.

She covers so much ground in such a little book that the reader could devour it quickly in hours or spend weeks reading it slowly, savoring each bit of wisdom.

Anyone who is grieving or anyone who knows a grieving person will find hope and support in this small book.

Publishers Weekly January 20, 2006
Author Bio
JERUSHA HULL MCCORMACK grew up in Hanover, New Hampshire and currently lives in Dublin, Ireland and Beijing, China. She is Visiting Professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University; she was previously Senior Lecturer at University College, Dublin. She is a member of the Anglican Church of Ireland