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anthony
Founder
I thought it appropriate to list the five stages of grief here, as whilst these stages can be nearly applied to trauma in general, they were facilitated in relation to death specifically, and thus this forums topic is.... Death. Weird or what? Ok... enough joking.
The Five Stages of Grief is called the "Kübler-Ross model."
The Five Stages of Grief is called the "Kübler-Ross model."
- Denial - Straight forward really... how many times have you heard, or said yourself upon the death of a loved one, "they aren't really gone! They can't be dead!" Or such statement? Denial is very evident.
- Anger - This is a pickle of a stage, the "why me?" "who is to blame?" You're looking for everyone and anyone to blame for the death, whether blame is relevant or not.
- Bargaining - You can't buy your way out of death, or a loved ones. It doesn't matter what you pray for, death is imminent and everyone is going to die, regardless how much you think swapping or doing something will change the end result.
- Depression - The reality is starting to set in that you, or someone you love, is dying or dead. Everyone handles this differently, from getting drunk, drugged, laying around doing nothing and so forth. But you're nearly there....
- Acceptance - The end result, that you accept there is nothing you can do to change the outcome of death, and that the person isn't coming back or you can't stop the death. Reality has set in and now you can get on with life.