Grief
Five Stages of Grief
The Kübler-Ross model describes, in five
discrete stages, the process by which people deal with grief and
tragedy. Terminally ill patients are said to experience these
stages. The model was introduced by
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross in her 1969 book On Death and Dying. The
stages have become well known, and are called the Five Stages of
Grief.
Enumeration of stages
The stages are:
- Denial : The initial stage: "It can't be happening."
- Anger : "Why ME? It's not fair?!" (either referring to God, oneself, or anybody perceived, rightly or wrongly, as "responsible")
- Bargaining : "Just let me live to see my son graduate."
- Depression : "I'm so sad, why bother with anything?"
- Acceptance : "It's going to be OK."
Kübler-Ross originally applied these stages
to any form of catastrophic personal loss (job, income, freedom).
This also includes the death of a loved one and divorce. Kübler-Ross
also claimed these steps do not necessarily come in order, nor are
they all experienced by all patients, though she stated a person
will always experience at least two.
Others have noticed that any significant personal change can follow
these stages. For example, experienced criminal defense attorneys
are aware that defendants who are facing stiff sentences, yet have
no defenses or mitigating factors to lessen their sentences, often
experience the stages. Accordingly, they must get to the acceptance
stage before they are prepared to plead guilty.
Additionally, the change in circumstances does not always have to be
a negative one, just significant enough to cause a grief response to
the loss (Scire, 2007). Accepting a new work position, for example,
causes one to lose their routine, workplace friendships, familiar
drive to work, even customary lunch sources.
Grief
In popular culture these stages are almost
exclusively applied only to news of one's own impending death. The
notion that to resolve grief they must all be followed, in order, is
also common.
Although, in 1974, "The Handbook of Psychiatry" defined grief as
"...the normal response to the loss of a loved one by death," and
response to other kinds of losses were labeled "Pathological
Depressive Reactions," this has become the predominant way for
counselors and professionals to approach grief, loss, tragedy and
traumatic experiences.[1]
Further, many psychiatrists believe real grieving begins after the
stages are over, and that "grief work", involving its own set of
stages, begins with acceptance, where the Kubler-Ross stages end.
Research on the theory
A February 2007 study of bereaved
individuals, from Yale University obtained some findings that were
consistent with the five-stage theory and others that were
inconsistent with it .
Criticism
The original Kübler-Ross model did not
identify five stages of grief. It identified what Kubler-Ross called
"the Five Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News". There exists no real evidence that stages are present in coping with
death: Using the terms stages implies that there is a set order of
set conditions, meaning that everyone will go through each stage at
the same time while confronting impending death. The order of the
stages, as well as the amount of time each stage lasts can vary.
Also, the definition of each stage is not clear, and some stages can
be combined.
More specifically, there is no real evidence that people coping with
their impending death move through all of the five stages. The path
through the stages is not a one-way street: they can repeat, occur
out of order or not at all. It is highly dependent on other
qualities, such as emotional ties to family, and other
relationships. These stages can also occur in a repetitive,
spiral-like fashion where the individual is re-working and
re-experiencing various grief stages over time. "Real events", such
as moving, getting rid of the loved ones clothing or objects, etc.
tend to trigger a grief regression in which the grieving individual
may re-experience anger or shock or depression.
The way in which the particular loss is experienced may strongly
influence how grief is played out. A sudden loss or violent loss in
which one is "blind-sided", caught unaware and unprepared, may
create a traumatic loss which is probably more difficult to process
and work through.
