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Nobody Wants to Talk about it - Baby Boomers Face Grief

Topic: Grief and LossBy Jane GalbraithPublished Recently added

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Baby Boomers are in for a shock!!! We may think that we are prepared for the sadness that will accompany our parents’ death. In fact we are usually totally unprepared for this life experience. To lose the people in your life that have always been there and know you the best is a life-altering event.

I was sure that I understood the pain that would accompany the eventual death of my mother. Professionally I was a nurse and involved in palliative care and bereavement counselling so I was sure that I was prepared. I was wrong!!

I quickly realized that this experience could only be described as a total assault on your being. I became conce
ed about my friends who had not yet experienced this pain.

This generation has had an enormous impact on many of our cultural and societal norms. This will be no exception!! Baby Boomers have had many advantages compared with previous generations but limited experience with suffering the consequences of events such as world wars and depression.

Grief causes physical and emotional pain. Baby Boomers have come to expect instant pain relief in this fast paced society.

Unfortunately Baby Boomers will be facing this chapter in their lives in a culture that does not give grief the respect or validation it deserves. Grief is an emotion that our society does not want to discuss. It has become an “off limits” subject in our culture.

Finding someone to listen to you again and again and again is a key element in getting through this difficult time. This can be a friend or a counsellor – it really doesn’t matter. Talking about our feelings is key to coming to terms with our grief.

We have inherited the “stiff upper lip” of our parent’s generation and have also been inundated with expressions such as “get on with life” and “closure” and “getting back to normal”. None of these expressions or attitudes helps the grief stricken.

Losing a parent is a significant loss that is difficult to describe to someone who hasn’t yet experienced it. The expectation of those around us to be “back to normal” takes an incredible amount of energy. The effort can be exhausting!!!

People don’t want to see others in pain. But due to that, we try to rush people through a process that follows its own timeframes and requires time our culture finds difficult to give.

We will never be the same after this life experience but will eventually develop a new “normal” and learn to live in a world without our loved ones. This process takes time and patience from those that are close friends and relatives.

Hopefully the sheer numbers of Baby Boomers experiencing this life event will change how our culture handles grief. It is not well understood. Without that knowledge it becomes more difficult to navigate through this inevitable and disturbing life experience. Regrettably grief follows its own timeframes. You experience waves of grief even months later when you least expect it.

There are positive elements of the grief process. As you go through this process you can find your priorities are different than before and there is an appreciation of life that perhaps wasn’t there in the past. Hopefully many Baby Boomers will experience some of these positive changes in their lives and help to change the way our culture handles grief.

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About the Author

Jane holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing from McMaster University and has worked in the community health care field since 1976. She is the author of “Baby Boomers Face Grief – Survival and Recovery". The introduction chapter can be found at www.boomergrief.com.

Her work has included dealing with palliative clients and their bereaved families for the past two decades and also assists facilitating grief support groups. She has been involved with both residential hospices that opened in her region as well as the palliative care initiatives in her area.

Jane sits on the Canadian Pension Plan Tribunal as the medical member to hear appeals for disability cases as well as providing nursing expert opinion on a variety of legal matters.

She presents on a regular basis to many community groups, hospices, volunteer groups and employers. Companies conce
ed about lost productivity have embraced workshops on the effect of grief in the workplace.

As well she has presented to the Bereavement Ontario Network annual meeting, the Canadian Hospice and Palliative Care Conference in 2007, conducted a workshop at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in September 2009 and presented to the Ontario Palliative Care Association in 2010.

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