GriefNet.org is an Internet community of persons dealing with grief, death, and major loss.
GriefNet is directed by Cendra Lynn, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist and certified traumatologist who works in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
GriefNet.org is an Internet community of persons dealing with grief, death, and major loss.
GriefNet is directed by Cendra Lynn, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist and certified traumatologist who works in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Grief, Loss, and Bereavement
At GoodTherapy.org
Willow Weep for Me: A Black Woman’s Journey Through Depression, by Meri Nana-Ama Danquah. (1998)
The first book to focus on black women and depression, seen through the personal journey of a young black woman’s descent into despair.
Meri Danquah, a “working-class broke,” twenty-two-year-old single mother, began to suffer from a variety of depressive symptoms after she gave birth to her daughter, which led her to suspect that she might be going crazy. Understanding the importance of strength in a world that often undervalues black women’s lives, she shrouded herself and her illness in silence and denial. “Black women are supposed to be strong—caretakers, nurturers, healers of other people—any of the twelve dozen variations of Mammy,” writes Danquah. But eventually, she could no longer deny the debilitating sadness that interfered with her ability to care for her daughter, to pursue her career as a writer, and to engage in personal relationships. “This is how the world feels to me when I am depressed,” she writes. “Everything is blurry, out of focus, fading like a photograph; people seem incapable of change; living feels like a waste of time and effort.”
She moves back to the city of her childhood where she befriends two black women who are also suffering from depression. With their support she confronts the traumatic childhood events—sexual abuse, neglect, and loss—that lie beneath her grief. This is not simply a memoir about depression, it is a powerful meditation on courage and a litany for survival.
Stifled Grief: How the West Has It Wrong
At the Huffington Post – The Blog
By Michelle E. Steinke
June 3, 2016
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michelle-e-steinke/stifled-grief-how-the-wes_b_10243026.html
Permission to Mourn: A New Way to Do Grief, by Tom Zuba. (2014)
Heartwounds: The Impact of Unresolved Trauma and Grief on Relationships, by Tian Dayton Ph.D. (1997)
From The Dougy Center, The National Center for Grieving Children & Families
http://www.dougy.org/grief-resources/developmental-grief-responses/
https://www.dougy.org/docs/Developmental_Responses_2017.pdf
Survivors of Loved Ones to Suicide (SOLOS) is a unique suicide support system created for individuals who have lost a loved one to suicide. We are reaching out to those who are on a JOURNEY called grief. We offer a support system unlike any other support system available which is a safe place to come together to share, to discuss, to vent, to learn, and to not feel alone. We offer these individuals both online and face-to-face grief support groups and continue to grow both throughout the United States and the World. As a result, these survivors feel secure and know they are never alone on this journey through suicide grief.
solos1998@yahoo.com
http://www.solossurvivorsoflovedonestosuicide.com/
Open to Hope is a non-profit organization whose mission is to help people find hope after loss. They invite people to read, listen, and share stories of hope and compassion and offers a way for grief and loss to have voice.
http://www.opentohope.com/
Coping with Grief and Loss
Understanding the Grieving Process
By Melinda Smith, M.A., Lawrence Robinson, and Jeanne Segal, Ph.D.
April 2017
From HelpGuide.org
http://www.helpguide.org/articles/grief-loss/coping-with-grief-and-loss.htm