The Deceased-focused Approach to Grief

An Alternative Model

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  • © 2022

Overview

  • Provides a different perspective to the traditional grief models
  • Guidelines on practicing a deceased focused bereavement approach
  • A valuable resource for monitoring grief-recovery progress

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About this book

Conventional grief models focus on the bereaved, including actions that they need to take to get back to normalcy following the death of a loved one. This book suggests that it might be helpful in the grieving process to focus on the deceased, instead. Research points to the benefits of altruistic acts and thoughts, including improvements in mood. Altruistic acts and thoughts also could be extended to the deceased, who in death has experienced a loss as well. By taking on the perspective of and being empathic toward the deceased, a “response shift” occurs that could result in mood improvement and happiness in the bereaved. The book provides guidelines for this alternative grief model in the death of a child, of a teenager, of a spouse/partner, and of a sibling; and in multiple deaths and in persistent grief experience among others. Based on motivational principles, a workbook is also provided for monitoring progress in co** with bereavement. Comprehension questions and additional readings are provided in each chapter to help the reader further explore the topic at hand.

This book would be useful in a course on death, dying and bereavement; to healthcare practitioners/bereavement counsellors; and to scholars in death, dying and bereavement across different fields including psychology, sociology, social work, public health and religion.

Most grief models focus on the bereaved, including actions the survivor needs to take to get back to normalcy after a loss. However, in the grieving process it might be helpful if attention is shifted to the deceased, instead. The bereaved, by doing things she or he perceives as pleasing to the deceased, might receive healing and satisfaction in return.

Lisa Farino (2010) notes that there is no shortage of research pointing to the beneficial effects of focusing on others. In a study by Carolyn Schwartz and Rabbi Meir Sendor (1999), lay people with a chronic disease were trained to provide compassionate, unconditional regard to others who had the same illness. The results showed that the providers of care and compassion reported better quality of life than the recipients of care and compassion, even though both givers and receivers had the same disease. The givers showed profound improvements in confidence, self-awareness, self-esteem, depression, and in role functioning. The researchers emphasized the beneficial importance of “response shift” (the shifting of internal standards, values, and concept definition of health and well-being) in dealing with one’s own adversity. Farino (2010) notes that this research is profound because in western culture the belief is that feeling happy tends to be getting something for yourself.

There are biological origins to the notion that “it’s better to give than to receive.” Using the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), researchers were able to demonstrate a connection between brain activity and giving. People who gave voluntarily and also for a good cause experienced more activation of the part of brain that controls for pleasure and happiness (e.g, Harbaugh, Mayr & Burghart, 2007).

Studies show that about 7% of the US population experience complicated or prolonged grief disorder (e.g., Kersting et al, 2011). This is persistent grief that does not go away, and many parents tend to experience this after the loss of a child.  In their study Catherine Rogers and colleagues (2008) found bereaved parents reporting more depressive symptoms, poorer well-being and more health problems after a child’s loss almost 20 years later.

Survivors usually show concern about how their deceased loved ones felt prior to death and if happy or not in the afterlife (e.g., Eyetsemitan & Eggleston, 2002). A study reported respondents used emotion discrete terms such as sad, happy or angry to describe the faces of deceased persons. The researchers suggested that the perceived emotional state of a deceased loved onecould impact on the survivor’s mourning trajectory (e.g., Eyetsemitan & Eggleston, 2002).

The bereavement model of placing focus on the deceased instead, provides an alternative to existing bereavement models, in hel** the survivor to cope with a loss.

 


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Keywords

Table of contents (13 chapters)

Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Psychology, Roger Williams University, Bristol, USA

    Frank E. Eyetsemitan

About the author

Frank Eyetsemitan is a Professor of Psychology at Roger Williams University in Bristol Rhode Island, where he previously served as the Associate Dean of the Social Sciences Division, College of Arts and Sciences. He is also a Faculty Associate at the UMaine Center on Aging and a Trustee of the Providence Public Library.

Dr. Eyetsemitan is the author or co-author of several publications on death, dying and bereavement; including the texts: “Understanding Death & Dying: Encountering Death, Dying & the Afterlife” (2020); and “Death, Dying and Bereavement Around the World: Theories, Varied Views and Customs” (2021).

 

Bibliographic Information

  • Book Title: The Deceased-focused Approach to Grief

  • Book Subtitle: An Alternative Model

  • Authors: Frank E. Eyetsemitan

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-98245-4

  • Publisher: Springer Cham

  • eBook Packages: Behavioral Science and Psychology, Behavioral Science and Psychology (R0)

  • Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022

  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-030-98244-7Published: 23 April 2022

  • Softcover ISBN: 978-3-030-98247-8Published: 23 April 2023

  • eBook ISBN: 978-3-030-98245-4Published: 22 April 2022

  • Edition Number: 1

  • Number of Pages: XVII, 233

  • Number of Illustrations: 3 b/w illustrations

  • Topics: Psychology, general

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