Losing a loved one is a traumatic emotion. What happens after the loss and the grieving process progress differently for most individuals. The loss process has 5 stages. Denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance… Each individual divides these processes into different time periods. While some experience their loss for 1 year, for others, this process may extend to 3 or even 5 numbers. Mourning is not held only after the person who has passed away. Sometimes mourning after a broken relationship or a broken friendship
can be held. Accepting loss is a gradual process. Some days you may find yourself saying yes, I’m cured, and some days you may find yourself looking at old photos and crying. You have to accept that this process is completely normal and say, ‘No matter what I do, I can never forget it’.
I would suggest that you do not get into such a perception. “If someone comes into our lives after a while after losing the person we love, would we be cheating on the person we lost?” The answer to the question is two options. If there has been a loss and then the mourning process has been completed, no one will be deceived. But if the deceased or disappeared person is still thought about every day, and their ghost haunts the house, a new partner may cause feelings of guilt that is difficult to deal with, the person may feel that they are cheating on their current partner. “When can survivors be interviewed by someone else?” There is no single answer to the question. Psychologically, as soon as he feels ready; ideally, when it comes to terms with the loss it has experienced and left it behind… In practice, it depends entirely on environmental factors; For some people, the answer is “immediately”, while for others, it may be “never in a lifetime”. There are no rules about emotions. We all love differently, experience love; We respond to and mourn the loss in different ways. These feelings and the process I have described are familiar to you and if you have difficulty in coping, I can suggest you to enter your therapy process with our institution or any specialist psychologist.
How does the grieving process go?
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