We are all life travellers. We venture in this life not knowing how it will end or how it will start. We all experience this life for the first time. No respawns,no reruns no retakes. We only have one shot at life & death is already anticipated...
Last week as I was browsing some articles in the @steemSTEM tag, I came across @abigail-dantes blog on Visits from Lost Loved Ones & Out-of-Body Experiences which left a great impact on me and my recent emotional pain. So I decided to write a blog on what I am feeling about the sudden loss to eventually free myself from the chains of sorrow and despair. My anxieties are killing me forcing me to be inactive these past few days in the blockchain. What makes this even worse is another personal problem that I have been hiding,which adds up all of my psychological baggages. To be honest I must say,it sucks to be me right now.
This Too Shall Pass | The 5 Stages of Grief
During my first few months here on this platform I remembered writing a blog about
Ending a Relationship | Things You Need To Know About The 5 Stages of Grief. It was kind of messed up I agree since I was still starting as a writer. I am re-writing another article about this since I know that everyone can relate to the agony a loss can bring in someone's life. Not only does it connect with a loved one's death but it can also be associated with break-ups in personal relationships. You heard me right, I said break-ups and ending relationships. The depressing feels you get from experiencing a loved one's death is I guess the same tormenting feels that you get from detaching to a relationship that you once treasured on.
In this section, we will talk about Elisabeth Kübler-Ross famous perspectives on grief as presented on her 1969 book "On Death and Dying". In periods of bereavement, we should understand that not everyone experiences each and every stages and the way people grieve maybe different from what Kübler-Ross has emphasized. Each individual will experience it differently. Some may look like they are okay on the outside but is terribly broken on the inside or some may look like they are mourning by the loss but deep inside they are not. Understanding these stages will help us understand where we are in the grieving process.
1. Denial

2. Anger

3. Bargaining

4. Depression

5. Acceptance

Grief Versus Major Depressive Episode
It's common for people to cry and to feel sad about a sudden loss of an important person in their life but what's not common is maintaining that bereaved atmosphere for a long period of time. Grief is an important step to fully overcome the sadness and emptiness felt of a tragic loss of a significant other. It is okay to measure one's emotional pain to be aware of how grief should last and to achieve emotional healing despite the loss. That person might be getting worse, they might fall into Major Depressive Episodes or worst it might even develop into a Major Depressive Disorder. I wont be talking about (MDD) here but rather I will just put emphasis on the difference between grief and major depressive episodes or (MDE) as highlighted by DSM-5.
In grief the usual response would be feelings of emptiness while in MDE it is persistent depressed mood. Feelings of grieving may decrease in days or weeks but in MDE it might gradually increase over time. People who are grieving associates their sadness with the memories of those who have left unlike in MDE the person is seen to be self-critical and highly preoccupied with guilt and negative reflections. When a bereaved person thinks about death and dying they will have thoughts about joining the deceased or having regrets with the ones who passed away. Whereas in an MDE, the individual is focused on ending their own life because of feeling insanely empty,worthless and a desparation to end up ones misery because of the significant loss.
To end this article I will leave you this quote for you to reflect on if we are sharing the same emotional pain & affliction...
The sadness and loss and aching pain of the heart will “lessen as time passes,” but it isn’t true. Sorrow and loss are constant, but if we all had to go through our whole lives carrying them the whole time, we wouldn’t be able to stand it. The sadness would paralyze us. So in the end we just pack it into bags and find somewhere to leave it.
Fredrik Backman
References:
1. Death- The Psychology of Dying
2. Death and Dying | Psychology Today
3. The Psychology of Death
4. Understanding the 5 Stages of Grief
5. The Five Stages of Grief | An Examination of Kübler-Ross Model
6.Symptoms of Major Depression and Complicated Grief
Further Reading:
1.American Psychiatric Association, Desk Reference to the Diagnostic Criteria from DSM-5,"Major Depressive Disorder" pages 94-97
Images from Pixabay:
1.,2.,3.,4.,5.,6.,7.,8.
Love & Light,
@sakura1012
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I am a proud member of @steemstem, a community which encourages engagement & active interactions through STEM(Science,Technology,Engineering & Mathematics) posts. For more information you can visit the community page through @steemstem blog or you can join us in discord through this @steemsteminvite