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Collective grief
- But when widely known events that include loss are experienced by large groups of people, a phenomenon called collective grief may occur.
www.verywellmind.com/types-of-grief-people-may-experience-7504728
People also ask
What are the different types of grief?
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Feb 22, 2023 · Grief involves coping with loss. While everyone’s experience of grief is different, many people work through common stages such as denial, anger and depression.
- Abrupt grief. Abrupt grief, a form of common grief, can occur when any sudden or unexpected loss occurs. Simone Koger, a licensed marriage and family therapist associate and certified grief counselor from Spanaway, Washington, explains this type of grief can be related to
- Prolonged grief. Prolonged grief is any grief that stays with you long-term. It can often interfere with daily life, and if it reaches a level where it significantly impairs important areas of function, it may be diagnosed as prolonged grief disorder, also known as complicated grief.
- Absent grief. The absence of feeling grief when you experience devastating loss is also a form of grief. Absent grief, explains Heather Wilson, a licensed clinical social worker from Blackwood, New Jersey, can occur when you’re not able to grieve because you are numbed by shock, denial, or dissociation.
- Delayed grief. Delayed grief may appear as absent grief at first, but rather than remaining unexpressed, this is a form of grief that can slowly emerge as the weight of a loss becomes reality.
- Normal Grief. Hahahahaha…oh wait, you’re serious. Okay fine let’s talk about 'Normal Grief' by first clarifying there is no ‘typical’ or ‘average’. There are no timelines and grief experiences generally vary from one individual to another.
- Anticipatory Grief: (See our post on Anticipatory Grief) As its name suggests, 'Anticipatory Grief' is the reaction to a death you were able to anticipate such as when an individual dies from a long term illness.
- Complicated Grief. Refers to grief reactions and feelings of loss that are debilitating, long lasting, and/or impair your ability to engage in daily activities.
- Chronic Grief. Strong grief reactions that do not subside and last over a long period of time. Continually experiencing extreme distress over the loss with no progress towards feeling better or improving functioning.
Jun 5, 2023 · Here, we’ll look at nine different types of grief, including why the different types occur, what the types look like, some real-life examples, and how each type of grief affects other aspects of a person’s life.
Aug 20, 2023 · Grief is the experience of coping with loss. It's associated with the death of a loved one, but you can feel grief because of any change that challenges your identity or life routines. You...
Dec 13, 2022 · Complicated grief is like being in an ongoing, heightened state of mourning that keeps you from healing. Signs and symptoms of complicated grief may include: Intense sorrow, pain and rumination over the loss of your loved one. Focus on little else but your loved one's death.