…The 5 Stages of Grief…
Putus cinta, atau patah hati, rasanya tidak enak (not delicious). Ajaibnya, di saat paling tidak enak pun, tetap masih ada hal-hal yang bisa dipelajari. Salah satunya yang menarik adalah 5 tahapan yang dikenal "The 5 Stages of Grief". Saya pernah tahu tentang ini, tapi sama sekali nggak ingat pas berada di situasi paling "nyesek". Baru tadi ini ingat, lalu segera klik ke Google dan cari artikelnya. Menarik sekali, dan cocok sekali dengan apa yang sudah saya lewati.
Tidak ada aturan pasti tentang berapa lama tiap tahapan ini akan dilewati oleh seseorang. Walaupun begitu, saya berpendapat, ada baiknya jika pengetahuan ini dimasukkan ke dalam pikiran kita selagi kita tidak berada dalam situasi grieving. Siapa tahu, setelah memasukkan ini ke dalam alam bawah sadar, kita akan terbantu untuk segera keluar dari situasi grieving. Siapa tahu.
Pada kenyataannya, seseorang bisa lupa sama sekali tentang tahapan-tahapan ini, di saat dia berada dalam situasi grieving. Tapi jika sahabat atau saudara kita yang mengalami, maka minimal kita sudah punya dasar pengetahuan untuk membantunya.
Berikut saya lampirkan artikel yang saya baca di http://www.counselingforloss.com/article8.htm. Semoga bermanfaat.
Beware the 5 Stages of "Grief"
Editorial - TLC Group, Dallas Texas
Few concepts have insinuated themselves into the popular culture as thoroughly as the so called "5 Stages of Grief": Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance. We’ve heard it from professionals in all areas of the healthcare system (who should know better) as well as from lay persons of all ages (who shouldn’t). There is even a lengthy comedy routine about it by Dustin Hoffman playing Lenny Bruce in the movie Lenny. The time has now come to ditch it as the concept has done more harm than good.Three Common Myths about the 5 Stages:
All of the above points to a basic misunderstanding about what grief is to begin with so it’s not surprising that myths continue to propagate. This is most likely because the pervasiveness and impact of grief wasn’t really recognized by the psychological community until around the 1980s and even then it was slow in coming. For example, in 1974 "The Handbook of Psychiatry" defined grief as "…the normal response to the loss of a loved one by death." Response to other kinds of losses were labeled "Pathological Depressive Reactions". In 1984, Dr. Terese Rando—a noted grief specialist, researcher and author—defined grief as "…process of psychological, social and somatic reactions to the perception of loss". In 1991, the Grief Resource Foundation of Dallas, Texas found that, for them, a good working and practical definition of Grief as "the total response of the organism to the process of change". Today, in December 1996, we at TLC Group have come to accept the Grief Response as the Unified Field Theory of All Mental Illness (a subject of another Tip of The Month!) Curiously, most non-grief specialists commonly accept the definition of grief given in 1974. So what is grief and what produces it? A helpful equation, which proves itself daily in all instances is: Change=Loss=Grief. This means that:
So, are the 5 Stages without value? Not if they are used as originally intended, as The 5 Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News. One can even extrapolate to The 5 Stages of Coping With Trauma. Death need not be involved. As an example, apply the 5 stages to a traumatic event most all of us have experienced: The Dead Battery! You’re going to be late to work so you rush out to your car, place the key in the ignition and turn it on. You hear nothing but a grind; the battery is dead.
This is not a trivial example. In fact, we all go through this process numerous times a day. A dead battery, the loss of a parking space, a wrong number, the loss of a pet, a job, a move to another city, an overdrawn bank account, etc. Things to remember are:
It was mentioned above that Grieving only begins where the 5 Stages of "Grief" leave off. Grief professionals often use the concept of "Grief Work" to help the bereaved through grief resolution. One common definition of Grief Work is summarized by the acronym TEAR:
This is Grief Work. It begins when the honeymoon period is over, the friends have stopped calling, everyone thinks you should be over it, the court case is resolved, "closure" has been effected, and everything is supposed to be back to normal. It’s at this point that real grieving begins. Notice that the first step of Grief Work is ACCEPTANCE, the last stage of the 5 Stages of Grief. Let’s throw out the 5 stages of grief and replace it with a greater understanding of Grief Recognition and Resolution. |