More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
A Complicated Grief
By Carlin Flora, Psychology Today
December 08, 2008

Sadness over a loss is normal, and everyone grieves differently. But some people experience an especially intense kind of mourning.

Grief is often characterized as an emotional roller coaster: On some days, those who have lost a loved one feel incredibly sad and full of pain, while on other days they feel a lightness, or even a strange euphoria that comes from appreciating the person who has passed and reflecting on their own growth in the wake of the loss.

But some people feel consistently upset and preoccupied with the person who has passed away, to the point where their relationships and work suffer for months on end. Such a reaction is known as "complicated grief."

The notion of a particularly sharp and prolonged kind of grief has been floating around for hundreds of years, but it wasn't until the 1990s that a group of bereavement researchers studied it systematically and pinned down its symptoms. They found that "complicated grief" occurs in about 10-20 percent of those who have lost a loved one. The symptoms, says Mary-Frances O'Connor, an assistant professor in psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at UCLA's medical center, are unique in their intensity. "They include an extreme yearning for the deceased, loneliness, even searching for the deceased in a crowd, and intrusive thoughts about the deceased."

Complicated grievers may feel that life has lost its meaning. "They will often say, 'I feel like part of myself died with the person,'" O'Connor says. People who were emotionally dependent on the person who passed away particularly at risk of developing complicated grief.

O'Connor conducted a fascinating study in which she scanned the brains of women who had all lost a family member to breast cancer. When reminded of their deceased loved ones, women with "uncomplicated" grief showed activation in their brain's emotional and memory centers. But the primary area that was activated in the brains of women with complicated grief was the nucleus accumbens?the reward center.

"When we are around our loved ones, it is normal for the reward system to be activated," says O'Connor. "So it makes sense that those suffering from complicated grief still expect to be rewarded with contact from their loves ones, on some level." It's as if the complicated grievers hadn't quite processed the fact that their mothers or sisters would no longer be in their lives. "They aren't in denial, in that they are fully aware that the person is deceased, and yet on a subconscious level, they haven't integrated that information. At some point the two 'realities' butt up against each other?and this may cause them to suffer."

Studies on treating complicated grief show that it isn't alleviated with depression treatments such as antidepressants, O'Connor says. "That kind of treatment doesn't hit on the patients' yearnings. What is most effective is talk therapy and exposure therapy that helps the person incorporate the death on a deep level. Also, it's helpful to have the patient focus on her future goals, on what she is going to do now that her loved one is gone."
 

Andy

MVP
Thank-you for that btw. It's good to know that I'm not, being as ridiculous as I thought I was. I haven't had much if any support on this issue so I don't know if I am being "normal" or not. Sooner or later I guess I will have to deal with this I guess.:shock4:

Thanks:goodjob:
 

Mari

MVP
But some people feel consistently upset and preoccupied with the person who has passed away, to the point where their relationships and work suffer for months on end. Such a reaction is known as "complicated grief."

Most information/articles mention 'months' but for me it has been almost four years. It was only when I was encouraged to focus on my goals that I could begin to move away from my grief and feel even a little bit of hope. The most important thing is that they should be my goals and not what other people think my goals should be. The closer it gets to the fourth anniversary of my son's death the more agitated I become and the more the tears. I am trying very hard to focus on my future and try to find a bit of happiness in each day. :) Mari
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Any time you see any sort of time frame mentioned for grief, my advice is to consider it as an "average" of some sort only. A statistic. And a statistic that for any given individual is meaningless. Anyone who tries to tell you otherwise simply hasn't experienced it.

  1. There is no time table for grief. You will work through the process in your own good time. Period.

  2. Grief is never over. You never get to the point where your grief is finished. You get to a point where you can live with it, a point of acceptance, and a point where you can once again find joy and contentment and peace in your life. But the loss of that person is always there in the background. Forever.
 

Mari

MVP
You get to a point where you can live with it, a point of acceptance, and a point where you can once again find joy and contentment and peace in your life.

I have not reached any of those points but I do feel good that I am now at the point where I can start thinking about what I am going to do. Acceptance, that is a lot harder. Joy, contentment, and peace - now I feel at least a little bit of hope that it might be possible. My son is always and forever in my heart - missing him just hurts so much. :heart: Mari
 
The most important thing is that they should be my goals and not what other people think my goals should be.

That is so very true Mari, thank you for writing that, seeing it in black and white, made me feel a sort of relief. I needed to read that today. :hug:
 
Replying is not possible. This forum is only available as an archive.
Top