Word: griefs
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...ashen eyes lit up. "Kind father, mother and sisters," the letter read. "I'm in the United States. I've been arrested. I hope I'll be released soon, since I'm innocent." Azeem shouted for his wife, Sardara, who tottered into the courtyard, disrupting the chickens; racked by grief, she had suffered several seizures since their son went missing. "Issa's alive!" Azeem cried, adding with bewilderment: "But he's in America...
...learned then that psychologists don't do any better with grief than anybody else does. I'd think to myself, "Why did you leave me? Why do I have to be the one who grieves? Why couldn't I have died and you be the one who grieves?" That anger makes no sense at all, because you know that person didn't want to leave you. I'd go on an airplane to give a lecture, and I wasn't afraid, because I wanted it to crash. For about a year, I ate over the sink. That's what...
...felt were not appropriate for the charity shops she had designated; some he intended to return but could not "because my memories of the death of the Princess were still much too raw." For most people in Britain, however, the cult of Diana has dulled. Other public occasions of grief, such as Sept. 11 and the Queen Mother's death, as well as happy ones like the Queen's Jubilee, have intervened. Her sons, so poignantly vulnerable in 1997, have grown up. The husband who made her life miserable has rehabilitated himself by being a good father - now 62% think...
What then can friends do if they want to remain on good terms with both parties? First, give it time, say therapists. Cut both spouses some slack until the waves of anger and grief subside a little. Let them know, gently, that you intend to be friends with each of them. "Early on in the separation, there are going to be strong feelings, and you need to be a shoulder to cry on," says the Rev. Scott Stevens, a licensed marriage and family therapist in Willimantic, Conn. "But if after a few months the venting is not getting better, tell...
Upon entering the gallery space, one is greeted by sculptor Tom Butter’s whimsical Hung With Grief (2002), a fiberglass cylinder with miniature steel girders for “legs” standing in an old pair of untied shoes. The sculpture resembles a man dressed in a barrel welcoming the viewer to the exhibition with its goofy sense of humor. Butter will be teaching “Three-Dimensional Artmaking” and “Sculpture I” this fall...