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The Kübler–Ross five stages of grief are:
Reading about the five stages on Wikipedia, it mentions that many psychologists suggest that the stages of grief are too simplistic, that not everyone necessarily moves through all of those stages in that order, and that the theory is backed by anecdata rather than science. I could've seen that coming—the theory is too elegant to be true in the narrow sense.
But I thought the more incisive criticism mentioned there was this one: that in the Kübler–Ross model, "The line is blurred between description and prescription." I have noticed in my own life that when someone experiences loss, people often invoke the grief stages in a prescriptive sense, urging the bereaved to move beyond denial and anger and learn to "accept" and assign meaning to the loss. You know, when god closes one door he opens another, etc. This prescriptive mentality seems especially true with kinds of losses that are not customarily labeled as "grief" but nonetheless instill similar a similar emotion: things like getting dumped by your lover, losing a job, etc.
A dear friend of mine lost his little brother in a tragic and unexplainable accident last year. In supporting him through the grieving process, it is hard to map his emotions (at least those that he expressed) to the five stages. He never exhibited any denial: he is a very pragmatic person, and used (due to his childhood experiences) to having to be the calm voice in the room when emotions run high. He never seemed angry. He had nobody to bargain with.
Basically, he went straight to depression and stayed there, and the depression got worse and worse and was exacerbated by his family's inability to process the loss; eventually they started taking things out on him, and he realized the only way to break the cycle would be to move out, which he did.
In his case, I think that it is likely that in many years, he will see his little brother's death as the catalyst that laid bare his family's codependency and emotional manipulation. This is a type of acceptance, I guess. But it is far from the storybook "And then god opened door 2, behind which was ..." suggested by the Kübler–Ross model.
In your experience, are there stages to grief? Should they be regarded prescriptively or descriptively? Are stage-based models of grief useful in supporting the bereaved?
- Denial
- Anger
- Bargaining
- Depression
- Acceptance.
Reading about the five stages on Wikipedia, it mentions that many psychologists suggest that the stages of grief are too simplistic, that not everyone necessarily moves through all of those stages in that order, and that the theory is backed by anecdata rather than science. I could've seen that coming—the theory is too elegant to be true in the narrow sense.
But I thought the more incisive criticism mentioned there was this one: that in the Kübler–Ross model, "The line is blurred between description and prescription." I have noticed in my own life that when someone experiences loss, people often invoke the grief stages in a prescriptive sense, urging the bereaved to move beyond denial and anger and learn to "accept" and assign meaning to the loss. You know, when god closes one door he opens another, etc. This prescriptive mentality seems especially true with kinds of losses that are not customarily labeled as "grief" but nonetheless instill similar a similar emotion: things like getting dumped by your lover, losing a job, etc.
A dear friend of mine lost his little brother in a tragic and unexplainable accident last year. In supporting him through the grieving process, it is hard to map his emotions (at least those that he expressed) to the five stages. He never exhibited any denial: he is a very pragmatic person, and used (due to his childhood experiences) to having to be the calm voice in the room when emotions run high. He never seemed angry. He had nobody to bargain with.
Basically, he went straight to depression and stayed there, and the depression got worse and worse and was exacerbated by his family's inability to process the loss; eventually they started taking things out on him, and he realized the only way to break the cycle would be to move out, which he did.
In his case, I think that it is likely that in many years, he will see his little brother's death as the catalyst that laid bare his family's codependency and emotional manipulation. This is a type of acceptance, I guess. But it is far from the storybook "And then god opened door 2, behind which was ..." suggested by the Kübler–Ross model.
In your experience, are there stages to grief? Should they be regarded prescriptively or descriptively? Are stage-based models of grief useful in supporting the bereaved?