Ambiguous loss is grieving what is lost while still recognizing what is present.

Ambiguous loss is grieving what is lost while still recognizing what is present.
“Listen to your kids,” Dr. Rich advises. “Ask them what questions they have and reassure them that they are safe and will continue to be safe.
Here’s a secret about Israeli society. If there had been ten people murdered and four people kidnapped we would be as horrified and stressed out as we are with 1400 murdered and 245 kidnapped.
The floodgates of civility have burst open and unleashed a deluge of hatred that is gushing across the globe.
The Philadelphia Medical Examiner’s Officer, at the insistence of the Philadelphia Police, “suspiciously reversed itself” regarding the cause weeks after Ellen’s death was ruled a homicide.
by Debra Rich Gettleman If you haven’t broken out of your pandemic isolation mode, you might want to rethink your penchant for privacy. A recent study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer reviewed journal of the National Academy of...
A fourteen-year journey that has been both painful and enlightening. I’ve often thought that grief needs its own vocabulary.
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