November 2021 Natural Awakenings Fairfield & Southern Litchfield Counties CT

Page 24

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Grief and After Death Communications by Elizabeth Raver

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s anyone who has lost a loved one knows, grieving can be extremely painful. Traditional grief therapy maintains that it is healthy for mourners to break their relationship with the belated in order to emotionally detach from grief. Mourners thereby “get on with it” by focusing on other areas in their life; not letting go can result in pathological grief. A number of bereavement researchers believe that this perspective demonstrates modern cultural values, which emphasizes the individual. Analyses of bereavement data indicate that mourners behave quite differently than Western protocols assume. Research indicates that it is normal for mourners to maintain a “continuing bond” with the deceased. By integrating the deceased into their everyday lives, mourners can facilitate healing and even enrich their lives. Relationships with the deceased can and do continue after death, albeit in a different form, according to research in Continuing Bonds: New Understandings of Grief. In the book Induced After-Death Communication, authors Allan Botkin and Craig Hogan describe how many researchers refer to continuing bonds as “inner representations of the deceased,” thereby sidestepping the question of life after death. However, the term “After Death Communications” (ADCs), coined by Bill and Judy Guggenheim in the popular book Hello From Heaven!, is now being openly used by a growing body of bereavement researchers. Research indicates that ADCs are common experiences. For example, a random American telephone survey found 62.6 percent of people have had ADCs in the form of “dreams, sounds, feeling a presence and having conversations”, as reported by Craig M. Klugman in a 2006 article, “Dead Men Talking: Evidence of Post Death Contact and Continuing Bonds”. A Pew Research Center survey found 29 percent of Americans report having had ADCs and that 74 percent believe in life after death. In an analysis of 35 ADC studies by Jenny Streit-Horn, the top five strongest papers indicate that an average of 34 percent of 24

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people have experienced an ADC. A study reported by James A. Houck, “The Universal, Multiple and Exclusive Experiences of After-Death Communications”, found that 75 percent of surveyed Americans mourning the loss of someone from cancer, AIDS, suicide or a sudden and unexpected death, reported having sensed the presence of their belated loved one. This study also indicated that ADCs are experienced by people of all ages, genders, religions and educational backgrounds, regardless of the type of death or how much time has passed since the death. However, science still struggles to accept ADCs as normal and healthy. Consequently, many mourners dare not speak of ADC experiences to counselors, therapists or doctors; patients fear ridicule, undermining or a mental illness diagnosis. Fortunately, attitudes are beginning to change. In their book Loving Connections, research counselors Jane Bissler and Lisa Heiser describe a patient who had lost his wife and daughter. To treat his grief and ADCs, he was prescribed an anti-psychotic medication which produced “terrible” side effects. He stopped taking the drug and found a counselor open minded toward ADCs. “She and I spoke at length about the afterlife and she assured me my experiences were entirely valid. She encouraged me to embrace the experiences and not be resistant.”


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