2024 Author: Malcolm Clapton | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-17 03:44
How to support a loved one if he is experiencing misfortune.
“Grief is no more talked about than sex, faith, and even the very death that gave birth to it,” writes Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's COO, in Plan B: How to Survive Adversity, Build Up, and Start Living Again.
Sandberg survived the death of her husband with her children and was not afraid to honestly talk about it. She has gathered her experience, as well as the results of research from psychologists, to help thousands of people around the world cope with their own grief.
We know how difficult it can be to support a loved one with whom trouble has happened. Sometimes the suffering of others hits us even more painfully than our own adversity. And very often we cannot find the right words of consolation and just keep silent. Here are some tips for you on how to properly support someone in distress.
1 -
Even people who have experienced the most terrible sufferings often want to talk about them. When we are in pain, we need to know two things: that the feelings we feel are normal and that we have someone to support us. By behaving towards suffering people as if nothing happened, we deprive them of it.
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Basic greetings like "How are you?" hurt, because the people who pronounce them seem to not admit that something significant has happened. If instead people asked, “How do you feel today?”, It would show that they understand how difficult it is for a person every day.
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Not everyone is able to talk about personal tragedy with ease. We all choose when and where to do it and whether to do it at all. However, there is strong evidence that talking frankly about difficult events can have beneficial effects on mental and physical health. This conversation with a friend or family member can often help you sort out your own feelings and feel understood.
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When tragedy strikes in your life, you usually find that you are no longer surrounded by people - you are surrounded by platitudes. The best thing you can do is admit it. Say the words literally: “I acknowledge your pain. I'm near.
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Until we acknowledge the problem, it won't go anywhere. By trying not to notice, those who are suffering isolate themselves, while those who could offer them support drift away. Both sides must meet halfway. Sincere words of sympathy are a great start. The problem will not go away just by your desire, but you can say, “I see. I can see how you suffer. And I care."
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It seems natural that friends are always ready to support friends, but there are certain barriers that prevent you from doing so. There are two types of emotional responses to other people's pain: empathy, which motivates you to help, and anxiety, which makes you avoid its source.
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When we find out that a person we care about has lost his job, is undergoing chemotherapy or is going through a divorce, at the first moment we think: "We need to talk to him." But then, right after this first impulse, doubts come to us: “What if I say something wrong? What if he is uncomfortable talking about it? Will I be too intrusive?"
Having arisen, these doubts entail excuses like: "He has a lot of friends, but we are not so close." Or: “She's probably very busy. Don't bother her again. " We put off a conversation or offer of help until we feel guilty for not doing it earlier … and then we decide it’s too late.
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Those who turn away from you in difficult times try to distance themselves from emotional pain out of a sense of self-preservation. Such people, seeing how someone is drowning in their grief, fear - perhaps subconsciously - that they too may be dragged into this abyss.
Others are overcome by feelings of helplessness; it seems to them that everything they can say or do will not correct the situation, so they decide not to say or do anything. But you don't have to do something extraordinary. Just to visit a friend is already a lot.
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There is no single way to grieve, and there is no unique way to comfort. What helps one person does not help another, and what helps today may not help tomorrow.
As a child, we were taught to follow the golden rule: treat others the way you want to be treated. But when someone near you is suffering, you need to follow the platinum rule: treat others the way they would like to be treated. Catch the signs and react with understanding, or better yet, react with action.
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Concrete actions help, because by not solving the problem, they nevertheless reduce the damage from it. “Some things in life cannot be fixed. But they have to be lived through,”says psychotherapist Megan Devine. Even little things like holding a person's hand can help.
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