There are common stages, but no
one experiences these in the same sequence, time frame, or intensity.
Some stages are:
Feelings of shock
Shock is often the
first reaction to news of the death of someone you love. It is your
body's way of coping with a traumatic situation.
Disbelief/Denial
Sometimes the suddenness
of the death is met with disbelief or even denial if the reality
of the death is too painful to deal with.
We express emotion
It is healthy for
us to cry and it is a natural release of emotion. Sometimes we may
express relief, as the death may provide a ‘release’
for the one we love from pain and suffering. It is normal to feel
relieved and you need not feel guilty. Suppressing your emotions
may slow your recovery.
Loneliness
Feeling alone is
common following the separation from the one you love. This happens
even when family and friends provide care and support.
Guilt
Some people feel
guilty for the death and blame themselves, particularly if the death
was an accident or suicide. You may feel that if only you had been
there or intervened in a situation, you might have stopped the death.
It takes a long time to resolve these feelings.
Anger
You may find yourself
expressing anger towards the person who has died for leaving you.
Anger might also be turned on people you feel could have saved the
one you love like doctors, or people who were present.
Physical Symptoms
Coping with
bereavement often causes a physical response. You may suffer from
headaches, temporary loss of memory and concentration, loss of appetite,
sleeplessness, low defence to flu and infections and lack of energy
or motivation.
Some people also reflect the symptoms
of their loved one's illness by "feeling their pain" in
a physical way.
Readjustment - life goes
on.
Throughout the grieving process,
many people find it hard to return to normal activities and routines
of life. However over time, you will pick up the threads of life
and finally feel that there is "light at the end of the tunnel".
Life becomes more bearable, although it has changed.