What Forever Means After the Death of a Child: Transcending the Trauma, Living with the Loss

Author:   Kay Talbot
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138140165


Pages:   294
Publication Date:   14 April 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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What Forever Means After the Death of a Child: Transcending the Trauma, Living with the Loss


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Full Product Details

Author:   Kay Talbot
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9781138140165


ISBN 10:   1138140163
Pages:   294
Publication Date:   14 April 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"List of Tables. List of Figures. Series Editor's Foreword. Preface. Prologue. Acknowledgements. What It Means to Be a Parent After a Child Had Died. The ""Mothers Now Childless"" Study: Research Design and Findings. When a Child Dies, Does Grieving Ever End? One Death - A Thousand Strands of Pain: Finding the Meaning of Suffering. Bereaved Parents' Search for Understanding: The Paradox of Healing. Confronting a Spiritual Crisis: Where is God When Bad Things Happen? Confronting an Existential Crisis: Can Life Have Purpose Again? Deciding to Survive: Reaching Bottom - Climbing Up. Remembering With Love: Bereaved Parents as Biographer. Reaching Out to Help Others: Wounded Healers. Reinventing the Self: Parents Ask, ""Who Are We Now?"". The Legacy of Loss. References. Resources. Appendices. Index."

Reviews

""What Forever Means After the Death of a Child will become a classic because Dr. Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping... [T]he few good studies of parental survivorship are explained and applied in ways that provide concrete direction to helpers and to the parents themselves."" -- Charles R.Figley, Ph.D., Series Editor and Director, Florida State University Traumatology Institute ""This is a stunning book--a cut above the rest on this topic...a particularly powerful and personally-impacting resource, this book inherently incorporates much of the newest thinking in the fields of thanatology and traumatology...I recommend it highly."" -- Therese A.Rando, Ph.D., BCETS, BCBT,, The Institute for the Study and Treatment of Loss; Author of Treatment of ComplicatedMourning and Clinical Dimensions of AnticipatoryMourning; Editor,Parental Loss of a Child ""This book is on the cutting edge of our studies of grief. It reaffirms the continuing ties that bereaved parents maintain with their deceased child and reminds us that even the most horrendous events can be cauldrons for growth. This book needs to be read by all who seek to understand or assist persons struggling with loss."" -- Kenneth J. Doka, Ph.D., Senior Consultant, The Hospice Foundation of America ""Talbot, a skilled writer, counselor and friend to the bereaved, as well as a bereaved parent uncovers the intensity of loss, frequently measured in the language and yardsticks of trauma, as parents struggle to respond to the death of a child. When do you recover from the death of a child? It is the question fraught with dilemmas, from the rich impressions of the pain experienced by grieving parents, to the very definitions implicit in the question. The fact is that losing a child is one of the greatest fears of life and its the biggest agony, yet society seems content to say, Life moves on and you will, too. Ignorance in society, even in providers and the loved ones and friends who surround the bereaved parents, continues to frustrate the parents and isolate them further and further from the hope and inner peace that might even allow for some breath of life and purpose."" -- Resources Hotline, 2002 ""The death of any child is a tragedy that rips apart a mother and father's life, shattering their world of parenthood, the focus of life, and destroying future dreams. Kay Talbot has sensitively spoken of her personal plight, compassionately presented the inner world of grieving parents, and professionally created a framework or research and data to enrich the reader's understandings of the parentally bereaved after the death of an only child. As Charles Figley explains in the preface to the book, ""Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping."" -- Linda Goldman in Death Studies, May 2003 ""A valuable, in depth look at grief through the experiences of mothers dealing with the death of an only child."" -- Contemporary Psychology ""What Forever Means After the Death of a Child will become a classic because Dr. Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping... [T]he few good studies of parental survivorship are explained and applied in ways that provide concrete direction to helpers and to the parents themselves."" -- Charles R.Figley, Ph.D., Series Editor and Director, Florida State University Traumatology Institute


What Forever Means After the Death of a Child will become a classic because Dr. Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping... [T]he few good studies of parental survivorship are explained and applied in ways that provide concrete direction to helpers and to the parents themselves. -- Charles R.Figley, Ph.D., Series Editor and Director, Florida State University Traumatology Institute This is a stunning book--a cut above the rest on this topic...a particularly powerful and personally-impacting resource, this book inherently incorporates much of the newest thinking in the fields of thanatology and traumatology...I recommend it highly. -- Therese A.Rando, Ph.D., BCETS, BCBT,, The Institute for the Study and Treatment of Loss; Author of Treatment of ComplicatedMourning and Clinical Dimensions of AnticipatoryMourning; Editor,Parental Loss of a Child This book is on the cutting edge of our studies of grief. It reaffirms the continuing ties that bereaved parents maintain with their deceased child and reminds us that even the most horrendous events can be cauldrons for growth. This book needs to be read by all who seek to understand or assist persons struggling with loss. -- Kenneth J. Doka, Ph.D., Senior Consultant, The Hospice Foundation of America Talbot, a skilled writer, counselor and friend to the bereaved, as well as a bereaved parent uncovers the intensity of loss, frequently measured in the language and yardsticks of trauma, as parents struggle to respond to the death of a child. When do you recover from the death of a child? It is the question fraught with dilemmas, from the rich impressions of the pain experienced by grieving parents, to the very definitions implicit in the question. The fact is that losing a child is one of the greatest fears of life and its the biggest agony, yet society seems content to say, Life moves on and you will, too. Ignorance in society, even in providers and the loved ones and friends who surround the bereaved parents, continues to frustrate the parents and isolate them further and further from the hope and inner peace that might even allow for some breath of life and purpose. -- Resources Hotline, 2002 The death of any child is a tragedy that rips apart a mother and father's life, shattering their world of parenthood, the focus of life, and destroying future dreams. Kay Talbot has sensitively spoken of her personal plight, compassionately presented the inner world of grieving parents, and professionally created a framework or research and data to enrich the reader's understandings of the parentally bereaved after the death of an only child. As Charles Figley explains in the preface to the book, Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping. -- Linda Goldman in Death Studies, May 2003 A valuable, in depth look at grief through the experiences of mothers dealing with the death of an only child. -- Contemporary Psychology What Forever Means After the Death of a Child will become a classic because Dr. Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping... [T]he few good studies of parental survivorship are explained and applied in ways that provide concrete direction to helpers and to the parents themselves. -- Charles R.Figley, Ph.D., Series Editor and Director, Florida State University Traumatology Institute


What Forever Means After the Death of a Child will become a classic because Dr. Talbot combines all of the vital elements of a vital resource for helping... [T]he few good studies of parental survivorship are explained and applied in ways that provide concrete direction to helpers and to the parents themselves. -- Charles R. Figley, Ph.D., Series Editor and Director, Florida State University Traumatology Institute


Author Information

Kay Talbot is a psychotherapist working with individuals, families, and groups experiencing life transitions. Her groundbreaking research on the death of an only child has been published in leading journals.

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