Loss Counselors Palm Beach FL

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Loss Counselors. You will find informative articles about Loss Counselors, including "Learning to Cope After the Death of a Child". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Palm Beach, FL that can help answer your questions about Loss Counselors.

Sue Jobe, Ph.D.
561 255-6001
Biscayne Drive
West Palm Beach, FL
Advanced Mental Health Care
(561) 659-7177
340 Royal Poinciana Way
Palm Beach, FL
Neville S Marks
(561) 655-3666
125 Worth Ave
Palm Beach, FL
Hearts and Hope
(561) 832-1944
317 10th St
West Palm Beach, FL
Mook Mary Lmhc/Counslr
(561) 833-4729
303 Gardenia St
West Palm Beach, FL
Aron Tendler, MD
561-333-8884
11903 Southern Blvd Suite 104
Royal Palm Beach, FL
Barbara F. Stern
561-844-1114
936 N. Lake Way
Palm Beach, FL
Legacy Behavioral Health Center Inc
(561) 616-8411
1551 Forum Pl
West Palm Beach, FL
Multilingual Psychotherapy
(561) 712-8821
1639 Forum Pl Ste 7
West Palm Beach, FL
McKinley Cheshire
(561) 655-4111
914 N Olive Ave
W Palm Beach, FL
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Learning to Cope After the Death of a Child

Nothing can compare to the pain and anguish parents experience following the death of a child. The organization, Bereaved Parents of the U.S., attempts to describe this indescribable loss.

"Bereaved parents do not 'get over' the death of our children nor 'snap out of it' as the outside world seems to think we can or should...We are forced to do the impossible: build a new life and discover a new normal for ourselves and our families in a world that no longer includes our beloved children."

In the United States, about 50,000 children die per year, triggering a complicated and traumatic grief response in parents left behind. The Wisconsin Longitudinal Survey, a long-term study of how different life experiences affect people, evaluated the effect of a child's death on parents. Bereaved parents report more symptoms of depression, a lower sense of purpose in life, more cardiovascular health problems, higher rates of marital disruption, and increased religious participation.

How to Cope

Everyone copes with loss in his or her own way. If you've lost a child, you can find a multitude of organizations, books, blogs, and support groups to help you. Behind them all, you'll find parents who have also suffered the same loss.

Sandy Fox, author of Creating a New Normal....After the recovery from death of a child, offers more than 80 techniques in her book for coping with your loss. On her blog, titled I have no intention of saying goodbye, Fox writes that she's continually working on creating a new normal after the death of her daughter. She notes that, among many other triggers, certain dates and holidays can provoke an overwhelming sense of grief.

The COPE Foundation (Connecting our Paths Eternally) provides online forums, workshops, support groups and an extensive list of resources on its website. COPE also offers numerous tips for bereaved parents, including:

  • Acknowledge the pain and suffering of your loss
  • Talk with caring persons and tell people what you need
  • Realize there's no timetable for coping with grief
  • Seek activities that help preserve your values and give meaning to your life
  • Write about your feelings in a (print or online) journal
  • Plant something living to honor your child
  • Create reminders of your child around your home
  • Be good to yourself

Experts say one of the most significant and healing steps you can take as you learn to go on without your child is to find meaning or purpose in your life.

Sources:...

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