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Rating: Summary: Highly Recommended Review: As has been mentioned in almost every previous review, it's really helpful to realize that "I'm not crazy" when we try to deal with the loss of a child. Mrs. Schiff's book can be just as helpful to our friends and relatives too. It's important that they realize that we're not crazy either. In fact, it should be compulsory reading for anyone who is in any way close to a parent who is trying to go on living after the loss of a child.First, a litle personal background: In 1980, my 17 year old son lost his life as the result of an automobile accident. Like so many other recently bereaved parents, I wasn't sure that I wanted to go on living, and, until I found a group called "Compassionate Friends" that was made up of other recently bereaved parents who met to share memories and feelings, I didn't think that there was anyone "out there" who had any idea of what I felt. In addition, as Mrs. Schiff states in this book, married couples who are each going through their own feelings of grief, guilt, anger, etc., are absolutely incapable of meeting the needs of their respective spouses, something that an "outsider" cannot fathom, but will be more aware of after reading this book. To a bereaved parent, almost anything that someone who doesn't share their experience has to offer in the way of sympathy or advice can be thought of as being thoughtless and/or ignorant. Reading this book is one way for a friend to get some idea of how to relate to a bereaved parent and what to say, or more importantly, what not to say. Mrs Schiff mentions that you shouldn't say anything like "I understand what you're going through." You don't understand what we're going through unless you've been there yourself. On one occasion someone said to me, "I understand what you're going through, my dog died recently." Can you imagine how I felt hearing that? The other one that I will never forget was the man who said, "You don't know how lucky you are, I have a retarded child and have to deal with that every day." I didn't consider myself lucky at all, and why someone else's tragedy was supposed to make me feel better, I'll never understand. Don't even think of comparing tragedies. The point of this is that both of these people were well meaning but what they said, out of ignorance, should have been left unsaid. A reading of THE BEREAVED PARENT will let you know that the best thing to say to a bereaved parent is "I know that I'll never understand what you're going through, but I want you to know that I'm always here for you with an easr to listen and a shoulder to cry on." Then, really be there for them. To summarize; THE BEREAVED PARENT, in addition to being a virtual life saver to one who has lost a child, can also be read as a sort of guide book on how to provide support and love to your friends who are coping with the loss of life's most precious gift, their child.
Rating: Summary: tremendously helpful Review: I first read this book after the death of my son in 1983. Ms. Schiff makes all those "crazy" feelings normal and understandable. After the death of my daughter (1992), this book was one of the first I turned to again. I have since read many books on grief and bereavement, general ones and those written specifically for parents. So many facets of the grief work are explained clearly and simply here: the effect on siblings, on relationships, etc. This is the book I recommend first for bereaved parents, and for those who, powerless in observing such pain, want to understand.
Rating: Summary: The Bereaved Parent Review: I had such a difficult time coping with the death of my mother and son after they were killed in an automobile accident in June of 2000. My grief counselor recommended that I read books written by parents who had lost a child. The author of another book I was reading mentioned how much this book had helped him after the death of his son. I purchased the book right away. I found it to help me realize that all the crazy thoughts in my head did not mean I was crazy. These thoughts and feelings are very normal after such a tragic loss. I recommend this book highly.
Rating: Summary: A little too harsh for the newly bereaved Review: I have yet to be able to finish reading this book. As a bereaved mother myself, I was unable to say the word "death" or "dead" for at least the first 2 years. Even now I still find it difficult. I would not recommend this book for any parent who is within a year or 2 of their loss. The author uses the "D" word very often and seemingly without regard to the newly bereaved. Yes, we know our children are dead. We know we will have to come to acceptance of this fact at some point in order to live fully, or as fully as possible after having buried your child. But there is no need to be harshly led into it.
Rating: Summary: The Best on the subject. Review: This book has become my solemate. The thoughts and experiences of the author made the miriad of emotions my wife and I experienced easier to understand. The loss of our 11 year old daughter will be something we never "get over", this book reaffirms that moving on is not the same as letting go. I would recommend this book to anyone who has,and I quote "stared at hell and survived".
Rating: Summary: Very helpful Review: This is a great book when trying to comfort from a loss and or get over a loss yourself. This is a book that you need to have on the shelf for those times when unexpected things happen.
Rating: Summary: Very helpful Review: This was one of dozens of bereaved-parent and bereavement-in-general books that were given to us after the death of our daughter last winter. This one helped me more in terms of understanding that this is a process, rather than a destination, and helped me with understanding how my husband and I would grieve somewhat differently and how we could keep communication open. I lent it to a friend, who said it helped her a great deal with understanding what my husband and I were dealing with; it "helped her to help us", in other words.
Rating: Summary: The one book that really helped Review: When a child dies, the world implodes. The family is cast into a maelstrom of pain from which there seems to be no relief, no hope of ever regaining a sense of normality. At each grieving home, someone should show up the day after the funeral with this book in hand, ready to share. Schiff writes for everyone, regardless of faith or lack of faith, defining and clarifying the issue of how to deal with this kind of devastating bereavement. She puts the pain in perspective, acknowledging the difficulties it causes in relationship to a variety of subjects: To family and friends, the funeral, guilt, anger, communication, religion, marriage, siblings, pleasure, functioning and the all-important "rest of your life." About holidays Schiff writes, "A very difficult area of functioning is coming to grips with the knowledge that there is absolutely no way of getting around holidays and vacations. Thanksgiving and Christmas and birthdays will come despite your best efforts to avoid them. And they are horrendous times for many years. Their pain cannot be minimized. But they still must be faced." As a bereaved parent, Schiff's tender and upbeat treatment of this painful and sensitive subject makes her book a classic and lifts it far above others in the genre. If you read only one book on grieving, make it this one.
Rating: Summary: Not just for the bereaved Parent Review: When we lost our baby brother in 1999, my sister was given this book to give to our mom. I still don't think she read all of it BUT I did and as a "big" sister dealing with my moms bereavment and my brothers and sisters it really helped me face and understand the many different ways people deal with the death of a loved one. I recommend this book for anyone close to bereaved Parents.
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