Here is one I haven't had to deal with as much - teens and death. My oldest daughter was 19 when Robby died, and Rachel was 8 so we skirted the volatile teen years for the most part. But helping teens deal with death is a little different than explaining death to a small child. There are not as many questions, but the loss is just as profound. They understand more about what's happened, but still need loving adults to help them through the many emotions that are sure to bombard them.
Here are a few hints about helping teens cope with grief:
Many Teens Are Told To
“Be Strong”
Sad to say, many
adults who lack understanding of their experience discourage teens from sharing
their grief. Bereaved teens give out all kinds of signs that they are struggling
with complex feelings, yet are often pressured to act as they are doing better
than they really are.
When
a parent dies, many teens are told to “be strong” and “carry on” for the
surviving parent. They may not know if they will survive themselves let alone be
able to support someone else. Obviously, these kinds of conflicts hinder the
“work of mourning”.
Teen Years Can Be
Naturally Difficult
Teens are no longer
children, yet neither are they adults. With the exception of infancy, no
developmental period is so filled with change as adolescence. Leaving the
security of childhood, the adolescent begins the process of separation from
parents. The death of a parent or sibling, then, can be a particularly
devastating experience during this already difficult period.
At
the same time the bereaved teen is confronted by the death of someone loved, he
or she also faces psychological, physiological and academic pressures. While
teens may begin to look like “men” or “women”, they will still need consistent
and compassionate support as they do the work of mourning, because physical
development does not always equal emotional maturity.
A blog about grief, and dealing with the changes in life since the death of my husband.
"A father to the fatherless, a defender of widows, is God in his holy dwelling."
(NIV)
This is a blog about widows,
mothers and daughters,
facing change and challenges
and receiving ordinary, everyday blessings that don't seem quite so ordinary anymore.
It chronicles the journey from grief into the restoration of what has been lost.
*** I am no longer actively posting to this site, so please come visit me at my new site ***
http://www.jrrmblog.com/ - "Starting Over ... Again"
Showing posts with label teens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teens. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
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