- Men and Grief

 
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A Critical Assessment of Euthanasia
A Friendship Too Brief
Adapting to the Loss of a Loved One: Three Tips on how to Cope
Afraid Of Dying? Afraid Of Living!
After Suicide: Returning to Life, Thanks to an Owl
After the Affair - Part 1
Am I a Mother - Tips for Handling Mother's Day After Miscarriage
An Unexpected Letter
And You Always Will
Angel of Comfort... The Story
Angelo Dies
Anticipatory Grief Symptoms: What's the Big Deal?
Anticipatory Grief and Ongoing Sadness for Caregivers
Are We All Losers? Understanding Grief
Beyond A Mother's Nightmare To Radical Forgiveness
Cherish Your Life - This Darling Little Girl Never Had the Opportunity to Do That
Coping With A Funeral
Coping with Grief - It's Called Living Through It
Coping with Tragedy and Loss
Cultivate a Friendship with Death
Dads, Life, and Death
Dealing With Grief and Loss - How to Mend a Broken Heart
Dealing With The Painful Loss Of A Loved One
Dealing With Tragedies (The 9/11 Tragedy)
Dealing with Change
Dealing with a Loss
Death Poem
Death and How it Affects the Living
Death of a Parent: Saying Good-Bye to Mommy or Daddy
Death, Close and Personal
Do You Know Someone Who's Dying?
Dying On the Inside: A Child's Grief
Dying at Home - A Precious Gift
Dying? Not Me! Why You Should Plan for Transition
Euthanasia: How Will I Know When it's Time?
Fear of Death
For Love of Ghosts
For THEM I Cry
Good Grief!
GoodBye GrandMa
Graceful Grief: Angelic Help is on the Way!
Grief & Loss - Healing Your Broken Heart
Grief - How To Deal With It
Grief Masks
Grief Support: The Do's
Grief Support: The Don'ts
Grief
Grief: Dealing With Loss
Guilty, Your Honor: The Burden of Guilt After a Suicide
Handicapped From Suicide
Helping Other Cope with Loss
How Can I Transform Tragedy?
How Long Does It Take to Mend a Broken Heart?
How My Four Your Old Son Reacted To The Death Of His Great Nanny "Biscuits"
How To Heal Your Heart
How To Write A Eulogy
How to Cope with Anticipatory Grief
How to Deal With A Death in the Family and Still Run Your Small Business
How to Deal with Suffering
How to Deal with Suicide and Euthenasia
How to Plan a Life Celebration
How to Turn Grief into Joy
I Lost My Brother Twice
If Ever It Is Me
In the Blink of an Eye
Is Death Really the End or the Window to A New Beginning?
Just What Do We Mean by ABUSE Anyway?
Katrina Whispered Something: Can You Hear It?
Learning to Live Again
Lessons We Learned From Terri Schiavo
Lessons from the Dying
Let's Not Forget the Human Side Of Hurricane Katrina
Liberation
Life After Death
Losing Power Without Losing Power: What l Learned From No Lights and No Voice
Losing a Loved One
Loss Involves Change - The Transformative Power of Loss and Change
Made in Heaven
****Men and Grief****
Mexico: Death in Mexico
Mindfulness and Empathy: Using the News
Miracles?
Moving Beyond Grief and Loss
New Tears [about Grievng-with commentary]
On Death and Dying
On Empathy
One Stray Tear
One Woman's Way of Dealing With Grief
Online Memorial - A Dedication of Love for Your Departed Loved Ones
Online Monument - An Ever-lasting Tribute to Your Departed Loved Ones
Overcoming Grief
Perspective on My Mom's Death and Life
Pet Loss: Significant and Profound Loss or Much Ado about Nothing?
Physiological Consequences of Carrying Emotional Trauma
Pope John Paul II
Present Moment Awareness: Lessons From My Dog
Proof of Spiritual Afterlife: Messages from Beyond
Rain and Rainbows
Scared to Death of Dying and Denying Grief
Seven Easy Steps to Writing a Eulogy
Show Me the Way to go Home
Signs After Suicide: The Red Butterfly
Silent Tears - from a Norwegian Hospital
Starting Over After Loss
Suicide - An Eternal Pain
Suicide Survivor
Suicide in the Church Part 1
Suicide in the Church Part 2
Suicide in the Church, Part 3
Sympathy Flowers
Sympathy Messages
Tenderizing
Terminal Illness- Death and Grief
Terrorism Worries: 10 Ways to Turn Fear into Hope
The Creative Side of Healing
The Grief And Belief Connection
The Journey from Grief to Gratitude
The Lesson of a Mother's Death
The Look of Grief
The Truth About Emotional Intelligence
The Twists and Turns of Life
The Valley of Sorrow or 'My Life as a Well Digger'
The Walking Wounded
Then and Now.
Thoughts on Death
Threads of Life - the Inevitability of Loss
Traumas as Social Interactions
Trial by Fire - 9 Tips for Grieving Couples
Understanding Grief and Loss in Times of War and Disaster
Watching Death
We are the Reflection of our Lives: How to Survive Loss & Humility
What is an Appropriate Sympathy Gift?
What this Rabbi Learned from Not being Re-hired
What's It All About?
When Bad Things Happen
When Change Comes (Dealing With Grief and Loss)
When Healing Comes
When Sorrow Is Too Great to Be Borne Alone, Support Groups Reach Out
When The Spirit Leaves The Body
When You Lose Someone You Love: A Personal Journey Through the Heart of Grief
When's Sarah Coming Home? Helping Your Child Understand Death
Who has the Worst Pain
Why Does God Allow Suffering?
Why Don't We Talk About Anticipatory Grief?
You Can Help A Grieving Heart
You Have to Show Up: On Small Miracles (Okay, maybe not so small)
 
You are in - Home » Articles » Self Improvement » Grief Loss
 

Men and Grief


Men grieve differently from women. Our cultural roles make it difficult for men to look for support, and harder again to accept it. Men are so often silent, solitary mourners who immerse themselves in activity and private, symbolic rituals. They feel profoundly, but often can't express the depth of their loss.

A man is supposed to be "strong," to support, to cope, and to plan in the aftermath of loss. His own pain must be put away.

Grief doesn't discriminate between gender or culture. Our society has placed clear expectations and requirements upon our roles as men and women. Boys learn quickly what behaviour is considered inappropriate through such statements as, "Stand up and take it like a man." "You're the man of the house," and the insidiously cruel "Big boys don't cry."

Male grief tends to have four main characteristics.

1. Moderated feelings
Men have deep feelings but don't express openly, a more readily available feeling is anger. Men deal with their real feelings by redirecting their energies.

2. Cognitive Experience
Men work more with cognitions explaining their grief or with problem-focussed strategies that help them adapt and protect.

3. Problem-Focussed Activity
Men may adapt to loss by practical hands-on finding solutions to problems associated with the loss.

4. Desire for Solitude
Men don't seek support groups. They want to master their own feelings and also reflect the more practical behaviour involved in adapting to a loss.

Societal Demands on Men
Men are expected to be "in control" of life's demands and have to submit to the following demands society has placed on them. They're expected to :-

· remain emotionally and physically strong
· always be rational
· don't cry or publicly mourn
· don't ask for support or affection --- be self-sufficient
· remain as non-expressive as possible
· provide, not nurture
· shake hands, don't hug.

These generalisations continue to hold their power over men in pain. Let's take the old myth about crying. The truth is it takes a truly strong man to be able to cry. Acknowledging that each of us grieve in very different ways can allow men to cope with loss and pain using their own various coping methods. We all grieve despite our gender, race or culture. We grieve because we have loved and, through our journey, we can be healed.

Tears are a gift
Grieving men need to hear that their tears are a gift to help their healing. Men have historically been fobbed off and denied this important gift. We need to open up to how men grieve and start sharing thoughts and feelings in a more meaningful, supportive way.

The realisation that grief can be a constructive, healing process, which can be shared with others, can inspire us all to be intentional in our grief process.

Susanna Duffy is a Civil Celebrant, mythologist and grief counsellor. She is a creator and guide of Rites of Passage for personal ceremonies and civic functions. Website: http://celebrant.yarralink.com

Article Source - Article Monster.com


 

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