Most of us acknowledge how a recent loss or significant life transition can affect someone
We sympathize with their need for support, reassurance, and help through the first days and weeks of adjustment. Few of us, however, appreciate that a significant loss is a “life-changing event” that requires considerable understanding and effort to adjust to, and is one that affects the survivors for the rest of their lives.
If you have been negatively affected by either a recent loss or one that you experienced many years ago, and it is affecting how you live your life today, you may benefit from counseling with a therapist who specializes in loss and bereavement. I understand both the short-term needs and long-term impact of loss, and can help you at whatever stage of bereavement you are.
Grief Counseling
I work with individuals and families, who have confronted many forms of loss — death, divorce, illness, career changes, lifestyle changes, and pet loss. All life changes involve painful transitions, when we are not sure who we are and where we are going. Together, my clients and I identify the ways in which their loss and associated grief affect their lives — from day-to-day changes to crises of faith, and the ways their losses challenge their perceptions about the world.
Examples of people I work with include:
Widows and widowers, parents who have lost children, adult children who have lost parents, and siblings who lose siblings;
Adult children of aging parents, having to make difficult decisions about how and where they should live their remaining years;
Seniors between 65 and 90 years old examining their options for their lives and their deaths;
“Empty nesters” confronting changing roles and relationships with their spouses and children;
Men and women facing career changes– voluntary and involuntary–who wish to explore the relationship between their work and their identity, and the implications of these changes.
Pet lovers who have lost these treasured “family members,” and need special understanding and acceptance for their grief.