Dying: A Guide for Helping and CopingPermanent Press, 2000 - 208 pages Dying is a guide to not only dealing with the death of loved ones, but an exploration of facing one's own death. It is a book designed to amplify and challenge one's own perception of the dying process and death itself in order to allay fears and help one, hopefully, to build a richer spiritual foundation.It is a practical book designed to teach tools for honest and open communication between the dying and one's family and friends, a book that offers suggestions on everything from the most challenging and painful aspects such as bereavement to the everyday choices of pain alleviation, funerals, hospital stays, alternative treatment, financial problems, and caring at home for the terminally ill.Throughout the book, Dr. Shepard utilizes not only the perceptions of sages throughout the ages, but his own interviews with both dying patients and families which are moving, comforting, and enlightening. |
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Page 77
... grief and anger . Unspoken feelings and unmade decisions often cause additional anguish retrospectively . If ever there was a time for people to have honest and trustworthy communications with one another , the period preceding death ...
... grief and anger . Unspoken feelings and unmade decisions often cause additional anguish retrospectively . If ever there was a time for people to have honest and trustworthy communications with one another , the period preceding death ...
Page 137
... grief . Our emotions are altered in one of two ways . We either surrender to them completely and let them pass through us , or we shift attention from one state to another . Thus , the mourner is either encouraged to express his tears ...
... grief . Our emotions are altered in one of two ways . We either surrender to them completely and let them pass through us , or we shift attention from one state to another . Thus , the mourner is either encouraged to express his tears ...
Page 181
... grief is there and there is nothing you can do about it — just sort of live around it - get back into life . It never goes away , but you learn to accept it . Life goes on . It just doesn't stop , and if you dwell on that , it's just a ...
... grief is there and there is nothing you can do about it — just sort of live around it - get back into life . It never goes away , but you learn to accept it . Life goes on . It just doesn't stop , and if you dwell on that , it's just a ...
Table des matières
Someone You Love Is Dying | 9 |
Why Me? Why Anyone? Facing Death at 25 | 25 |
Never Lost My Sense of Humor | 33 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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accept afraid Anyway asked aware believe better biopsy blood body brain breast cancer called cancer cause chemotherapy chronic clinical death comfort congestive heart failure cope cure dead death depression diagnosis died doctor drugs dying person Elisabeth Kubler-Ross eventually everything experiences face fatal illness father fear feel felt final friends funeral give grief guilt heart Hodgkin's disease hope hospital husband Jack James Pike Janet Karen kids knew Kubler-Ross laugh Lilly liver liver scan living look lung malignancy Marty Mary Catherine Maurice Maeterlinck metastatic months mother multiple myeloma never nice nurse operation orchiectomy pain patients percent physician prednisone psychedelic drugs share sick sister sitting shiva someone sure surgeon survivors talk tell things thought tion told treatment tumor upset walk weeks wife woman worry young