Death is part of the life circle, this is the end of your time on Earth, with the family and the end of the loved one. I hope everyone will die, I will leave my family and I will not miss the fun time that your loved one goes through when it dies. Among Mercury's readers, Elizabeth Cubballus 'Fear of Death' and Joan Didion 'Age from Magical Thinking Year' have a common debate about death and sorrow. Steve Jobs made a speech at the graduation ceremony of Stanford University and further explored my feelings of death through personal experience.
So, words about intention. Below are my random and somewhat disjointed considerations of rituals of support to sorrow and sorrow. They are not guides on how to cause sorrow, loss or death. Instead, they are ideas and insights gained from following several paths. After all, I think that the best way for those who may be uncertain is to be honest, to depart from respect, and to understand eternal values.
Throughout life, we have experienced many sad circumstances. Sorrow can be caused by circumstances, relationships and even substance abuse. A child may be sorrowful at divorce, his wife may be saddened by her husband's death, and a teenager may feel sorrow at the end of human relations. Or you may be saddened by your pending death while receiving the ultimate medical news. In 1969, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross explained five common sorrow stages, commonly known as DABDA. Swiss psychiatrist Kubreros first introduced her five-step sorrow model at her book Death and Death. The Kübler-Rose model is based on her research on terminal patients, and has received many criticisms over the years since. People who studied her model mistakenly believed that this was a particular order of people's sorrows, as everyone had undergone various stages. Kübler-Ross noticed that these stages are not linear and may not encounter any of these stages.
The pioneering work of the influential psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, "Death and Death" has become a national debate about sorrow and its five stages. Before her death in 2004, she and David Kessler wrote "sorrow and sorrow". And it explored a sad experience. With regard to sorrow and sorrow, we will explore how the sorrow process, such as the author's own experience, practical wisdom, case study, will save us from loss. It delves deeper into sorrow, harassment, dreams, isolation, and healing. Emotional words: "The reality is that you will always be sad, you will not" overcome "losing your loved one. You will learn to endure it. It is not the same. You should not be the same.