Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted. (Matthew 5.4)

The mission of Grief Loss & Recovery is to offer emotional support, friendship & provide a safe haven for bereaved persons to share their grief.

Mental Health Resource

alcoholic

Our goal is to bring people together around the issues of addictions by providing concise, up-to-date information and a meeting place for patients, their friends and families, and professionals who offer pathways to recovery. www.psyweb.com

Participate in a Research Study

comforting

If you have experienced the death of a loved one in the past ten years and are over eighteen years old, we invite you to participate in a brief online study of the ways that individuals make sense of and find meaning in loss. All participants will be entered in a raffle to win one of two $50 gift certificates to Amazon.com.

Your participation will contribute to a better understanding of grief and loss. The researchers, Dr. Brian Vandenberg, and Rachel Hibberd, are most grateful for your time and help in completing the study. If you have any questions, please e-mail rhibberd@umsl.edu. The study has been approved by the Institutional Review board of the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

 

Click here to participate:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/2DTKDZ9

Click here to participate: 
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/2DTKDZ9

 

Book Corner

Rays of Hope in Times of Loss: Courage and Comfort for Grieving Hearts [Hardcover]

515SE61690L._SS500_Are you, or someone you know, grieving a significant loss? Rays of Hope in Times of Loss offers soothing guidance to help you discover the answer to many questions. It is filled with powerful therapeutic narrative, original poems, and photographs that reflect the different aspects of the emotional excursion through grief. In our fast-paced lifestyles of today, many people face loss with little guidance and insufficient time to genuinely recover. This book helps people receive beauty, wisdom, and meaningful answers about loss as they move through the maze of grief, without requiring long hours of study and heavy research. Better than a sympathy card or flowers, show how much you care by giving a copy as a gift to others or to yourself.

buy-add

 

Funeral Wreaths

Submission Guidelines: We accept articles, short stories, and poetry. We only accept submissions from the original author or a publicist hired by the copyright owner to submit material here. We do not pay for submitted content nor do we accept submissions that are primarily advertisements. You may place a brief resource box and contact information at the end of your submission. To submit content to this website, write joanne@grieflossrecovery.com.
Mar072011
PDFPrintE-mail
Michelle Laurel

One of the most difficult tasks following the death of a loved one is helping the children involved, to deal with their grief. This task can be even more challenging when the parents are dealing with their own grief. Here are three basic guidelines, how to help children with grief.

 
Mar032011
PDFPrintE-mail
Roberta Stack Costantino

Roberta-Stack-Costantino_787504We all have lived through many types of losses. Some of us handle it better than others and there is nothing wrong with that. In today's economy, people are losing jobs, insurance, their cars, their homes, their good health - some due to stress.

 
Mar012011
PDFPrintE-mail
Steve Wickham

Steve-Wickham_119803Anyone who's truly suffered during a period of their lives - and has also leant fully on God within that tumult - knows this powerful truth of the Spirit. Indeed, anyone who's seen someone suffer, admirably taking up the chalice in a weird, transient joy, has probably known the envy one has in not feeling that powerful Presence of the risen Lord in and about them, as the one suffering does.

   
Feb282011
PDFPrintE-mail
Steve Wickham

Steve-Wickham_119803Let's face it, most loss is irredeemable. That's the fact that makes it impossible to reconcile in the shorter term - that we can't do anything to 'fix' this now. We cannot go back to undo or redo what was done.

 
Feb282011
PDFPrintE-mail
Sharon K Ross

Sharon-K-Ross_794072More often than not, it seems as though finality isn't always accompanied by understanding. Loss isn't like reading a novel and knowing that the end is inevitable, by merely turning the pages to a few more chapters. Loss creeps up, by way of surprise and then leaves you hanging in the balance while therefore trying to make sense of insatiable emotions.

   

Page 12 of 45