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

When You Lose Someone You Love (The Journeys) [Hardcover]

41ZEBWG5H4L._BO2204203200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-clickTopRight35-76_AA300_SH20_OU01_When You Lose Someone You Love is a very thoughtful and lovely book to revisit again and again as we live through sorrow and anger and loss. We don't know how we can carry on. This gentle book talks about the feelings of sadness and gives support and strength as you journey through this time of grief. It will be a source of comfort as you very quietly, very gradually begin to heal.

buy-add

 

Funeral Wreaths

03June2006
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Jo McNamara

We Will Not Be Diminished!

On September 11, I spent the day alternating between intense anger that made me clench my fists and enormous sadness that made me cry.


On September 11, thousands of innocent people lost their lives due to terrorist attacks that made sense only to the animals who perpetrated those attacks.

I, along with millions of people all over the world, watched in mindless horror as the day unfolded. As we heard that four planes had been hijacked and had crashed. Two into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon and one into the ground.

We heard stories of people jumping out of the windows of the World Trade Center. They chose not to be burned alive, but rather to fall to their deaths. We heard of a man on a cell phone, locked in the bathroom of one of the hijacked planes. “We are being hijacked!” A sound and then the phone goes dead.

So many gruesome stories, one after another. So many, your mind goes numb because you can’t comprehend this monstrous massacre of so many lives in such a short period of time.

At first you feel utter horror, then agonizing sadness and then the white-hot anger. How dare anyone do this to my country; how dare anyone do this to my fellow Americans; how dare anyone do this to any human being!

When President Bush came on the television to speak for the first time from Sarasota, Florida, I was relieved to see the anger in his eyes, even though his words were calm and measured. I knew then that the United States would not hesitate in retaliatory action.

As the Japanese discovered when they bombed Pearl Harbor, you do not invade our soil; you do not kill Americans and think you can get away with it. We will annihilate you.

What occurred on September 11 can only be considered an Act of War. And as with our entry into World War II, we as American citizens will do whatever we have to do. Our government will hunt down those responsible and make sure that justice is served. “This is the United States and we will not be diminished!”

Our lives as Americans changed on September 11. We have lost our innocence. I don’t think we’ll ever feel quite the same when we board a plane. If you work in a high-rise office building, will you feel as secure today?

The day that Timothy McVeigh was executed, the Orlando Sentinel published a two-page spread. On it were the photographs of everyone killed in the Oklahoma Bombing. The caption reads, “Lives Disappeared In An Instant.” Looking at each individual photograph, I came to fully understand that these were unique human beings…not just numbers.

I put it on the wall near my desk to remind me that there are other things far more important than the Internet. It also reminds me that I could lose those I love in an instant. Sadly, I will be putting another part of the newspaper on my wall today.

About the author: Jo is an Asian-American. She was born in Hiroshima, Japan. “May we say a prayer for the cherished lives lost on September 11. And may we say many prayers for those in unspeakable grief.”

Copyright © 2001 by Jo McNamara. All rights reserved.

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