These stages of grief are known as the “five stages of grief “that is Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance (JAOA, n. d).
These stages were described as the “coping mechanisms” used by the people to face extreme different situation. Denial is the first stage of grieving process which helps the people to overcome the loss. In this stage people will be in a state of shock and denial and the world becomes overwhelming and meaningless to them.
The state of shock and denial would enable people to pace their grieving feelings (The five stages of Grief, n. d).
In the second stage of grieving process, the grieving person may burst out with anger at doctors, nurses, relatives and even to the God for the loss. Bargaining is the next stage, in which the grieving person bargains their life to prolong or post pond the death of the loved ones for e. g. the person will become more religious, will give up bad habits, and also may edicate rest of the life to help others. Next stage is depression where people feel helplessness, hopelessness, spends more time crying and they may also show decreased interest in regular activities and work tasks. It is not advisable to cheer up a person in depression because the stage of depression is a very important time in the process of healing, person should go through this stage and it is a normal response of grieving. (The five stages of Grief, n. d).
The Term Paper on Signs Of Stress Person People Symptoms
'Forty-three percent of all adults suffer adverse health effects from stress; 75 to 90 percent of all physician office visits are for stress-related ailments and complaints; stress is linked to the six leading causes of death -- heart disease, cancer, lung ailments, accidents, cirrhosis of the liver, and suicide.' (Miller, 1993, p. 12) 'Stress plays havoc with our health, our productivity, our ...
Acceptance is the final stage where people feel its okay or alright with the grieving situation, they will accept the fact that no one can replace their lost ones or reverse the diagnosis of a terminal illness; this acceptance would provide a new meaning to the life. This writer is correlating the Kubler Ross’s stage of grieving process with the story of Job’s suffering. Bible says that Job was a very faithful servant of God who turned away from evil. He was a very wealthy person with seven sons and three daughters.
All of a sudden he lost all his wealth, his children and he became sick also. In this story there is no evidence that Job went through a denial stage, but after seeing all his suffering his wife advised him to curse God and die he did not listen to wife rather he replied “You speak as any foolish woman would speak. Shall we receive the good at the hand of God and not receive the bad? ” (Job 2:9).
The second stage, anger is evident in Job chapter 3 and 7, Job was cursing the day he was born and even though he was angry he never cursed or denied God.
According to Kubler Ross’s model the third stage of grieving was bargaining according to the scripture, Job never bargained with God because of his strong faith in God’s power he only wished for a “day in court” to have a personal conversation with God and hear an explanation for his suffering. Job’s speech in chapter 6;9 shows that he was depressed and he was pleading God for a quick death realizing that if his condition remains the same he may not hold out trusting in God for ever and he wanted to die as a believer.
The final stage of acceptance is evident in Job 13:15, this verse shows the depth of Job’s faith and he valued God’s faithfulness more than his life. In Job chapter 42 after Job’s conversation with God he had nothing more to say and Job received all his fortunes double folded While comparing the Job’s story to Sikhism, the Sikh people also believes that accepting God’s will is the fundamental purpose of life (Sikhs seek ways to address their grief. (n. d. ).
Sikh community also experience all stages of grieving process as described y Kubler Ross, but at the same time they experience pressure to show a more stoic face to the outside community who are not familiar with their culture and beliefs (Sikhs seek ways to address their grief. n. d. ).
The Term Paper on Adolescents And The Grieving Process Due To Death
Death is a difficult situation for anyone to deal with, but it seems to be harder for adolescents to overcome. Loss is something teens feel when they are separated from something or someone they care about, however life does continue. With death, teens experience a grieving process. Everyone grieves differently, just as every teen grieves differently depending on who died, how they died, and other ...
An important thing Dr. Elisabeth Kubler Ross noticed in her research was that, the one and only thing that persisted throughout all stages of the grieving process was “hope” which helps the grieving person to lead a meaningful life. The story of Job also gives us an understanding of the spiritual discipline in Job’s life.
With all the sufferings in his life he looked at God for the strength and support even though he did not feel the God’s presence in times of his trouble. The trust and hope he accumulated assisted him to survive the great loss in his life. After the research this researcher gained an in-depth knowledge on different stages of grieving process. This researcher would prefer to use the support of family and friends while handling the grieving process, this researcher also keep a resource bank of trust in God to overcome the time of hardship in the life Conclusion