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S9E7 - How to Lose and Recover

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Manage episode 425933749 series 3397616
Content provided by McCahill & Jeremy. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by McCahill & Jeremy or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Send us a Text Message.

How would you recover from a small or even large loss right now? Are you a good or bad loser? How does taking a loss affect your functional life? Have you ever had an ambiguous thought about something you couldn't control?
Ambiguous loss is a person's profound sense of loss and sadness that is not associated with a death of a loved one. It can be a loss of emotional connection when a person's physical presence remains, or when that emotional connection remains but a physical connection is lost. Often, there isn't a sense of closure.

In the 1970s, researcher Pauline Boss, PhD, came up with the term “ambiguous loss” to describe grief that has no definitive boundary or closure.

In doing so, this now renowned therapist and educator gave a name to a kind of unresolved loss that torments so many: The spouses of soldiers missing in action. Adult children longing for love from an emotionally detached parent. Immigrants homesick for the faces, sights, and smells of the lands they left behind.

Another type of grief called “anticipatory grief” can coexist with ambiguous loss and is often used interchangeably (both encompass feelings of sadness and a lack of certainty).

This week we would like to highlight National Councilof Family Relations if you would like to learn more or donate click here https://www.ncfr.org/
Please leave a comment and review our episode and give some feedback on what we can improve on!
Thank You All For Listening and Downloading
We drop an episode every Thursday
Follow us on all of our socials

Support the Show.

The 988 Lifeline
988 is now active across the United States. This new, shorter phone number will make it easier for people to remember and access mental health crisis services. (Please note, the previous 1-800-273-TALK (8255) number will continue to function indefinitely.) https://988lifeline.org/

  continue reading

95 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 425933749 series 3397616
Content provided by McCahill & Jeremy. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by McCahill & Jeremy or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Send us a Text Message.

How would you recover from a small or even large loss right now? Are you a good or bad loser? How does taking a loss affect your functional life? Have you ever had an ambiguous thought about something you couldn't control?
Ambiguous loss is a person's profound sense of loss and sadness that is not associated with a death of a loved one. It can be a loss of emotional connection when a person's physical presence remains, or when that emotional connection remains but a physical connection is lost. Often, there isn't a sense of closure.

In the 1970s, researcher Pauline Boss, PhD, came up with the term “ambiguous loss” to describe grief that has no definitive boundary or closure.

In doing so, this now renowned therapist and educator gave a name to a kind of unresolved loss that torments so many: The spouses of soldiers missing in action. Adult children longing for love from an emotionally detached parent. Immigrants homesick for the faces, sights, and smells of the lands they left behind.

Another type of grief called “anticipatory grief” can coexist with ambiguous loss and is often used interchangeably (both encompass feelings of sadness and a lack of certainty).

This week we would like to highlight National Councilof Family Relations if you would like to learn more or donate click here https://www.ncfr.org/
Please leave a comment and review our episode and give some feedback on what we can improve on!
Thank You All For Listening and Downloading
We drop an episode every Thursday
Follow us on all of our socials

Support the Show.

The 988 Lifeline
988 is now active across the United States. This new, shorter phone number will make it easier for people to remember and access mental health crisis services. (Please note, the previous 1-800-273-TALK (8255) number will continue to function indefinitely.) https://988lifeline.org/

  continue reading

95 episodes

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