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Judy Ellen Corcoran's avatar

Not long after my mother died last November, I began grief counseling. Having been diagnosed with clinical depression at age 19 (and I know I was depressed for several years before that), I have great awareness of my propensity to rapidly spiral downward and wanted to prevent "going there" as best I could. Mom's hospice care team offered this counseling to me at no cost and I took advantage of it. Jill was a great help to me. After several weeks of counseling, she brought up the fact that our society today (at least in the U.S.) no longer seems to have a way to publicly recognize one's mourning and offered me a small black rubber bracelet bearing the simple inscription: Grieving. I thought about wearing it, and nearly didn't. It felt somewhat uncomfortable at first, as if I were looking for pity or attention from others by publicly acknowledging my grief. Then I recalled how, as a child growing up in a large, extended Irish Catholic family, my great-grandmothers and great-aunts wore only black dresses for the rest of their lives when a loved one died. It has now been one year, one month, and six days since Mom passed. I'm still wearing the bracelet. It's a continual reminder of how much I treasured her.

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Mary Suddath's avatar

So if I get you correctly, grief is a feeling (highly individualistic) and mourning is the work you do (again highly individualistic)to navigate the grieving process.

Thank you. A close family member is approaching the final months of a terminal illness, and though I have worked with death and dying my entire professional life as a hospital nurse, it’s still very hard.

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