Death, Grief, and Caring RelationshipsBrooks/Cole Publishing Company, 1981 - 336 pages |
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Résultats 1-3 sur 74
Page 52
... Sometimes one aspect is more in evidence and sometimes the other . DEATH DESTROYS MEANING / DEATH AS MEANING Consider this apparent conflict . First , because death makes life tran- sient and because anything that does not exist is ...
... Sometimes one aspect is more in evidence and sometimes the other . DEATH DESTROYS MEANING / DEATH AS MEANING Consider this apparent conflict . First , because death makes life tran- sient and because anything that does not exist is ...
Page 222
... Sometimes griev- ing persons turn over specific past events in their minds , perhaps in an attempt to hold on to the person who died . As might be expected , dreams of the dead person are not uncommon , but more significant are ...
... Sometimes griev- ing persons turn over specific past events in their minds , perhaps in an attempt to hold on to the person who died . As might be expected , dreams of the dead person are not uncommon , but more significant are ...
Page 270
... Sometimes , of course , the treatment at- tempts not to cure the disease but to diminish its pain , discomfort , and incapacitation . The hospice program attempts this last - named ; so does the treatment of giving LSD and marijuana to ...
... Sometimes , of course , the treatment at- tempts not to cure the disease but to diminish its pain , discomfort , and incapacitation . The hospice program attempts this last - named ; so does the treatment of giving LSD and marijuana to ...
Table des matières
The Horse on the DiningRoom Table | 2 |
What Is Death? | 27 |
CHAPTER | 43 |
Droits d'auteur | |
17 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
adults anger Anticipatory grief asked avoid awareness become behavior believe bereaved body cancer caring relationships casket causes of death child clinical death concern course dead person death and dying death anxiety death education death fear death-related denial denial of death depressed develop died discussion dying person dying process elderly Elisabeth Kübler-Ross emotional euthanasia example experience expressed family members fear of death fears and anxieties feel frequently friends funeral directors going grief grieving guilt hospital important individual Kalish & Reynolds Kastenbaum kind LeShan live living-dying interval loss meaning Mexican Americans near-death experiences nurse older persons pain parents patient perhaps physical physician possible probably process of dying professional psychological psychotherapy religious response significant social someone Sometimes spouse stress suicide survivors talk Tia's tion told treatment widows wish woman women young
Références à ce livre
Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, Volume 35 Leonard Berkowitz Aucun aperçu disponible - 1964 |
Attachment in Adulthood, First Edition: Structure, Dynamics, and Change Mario Mikulincer,Phillip R. Shaver Aucun aperçu disponible - 2010 |