74 research outputs found
‘My life's properly beginning’: young people with a terminally ill parent talk about the future
This paper explores how young people who are living with a parent who is dying talk about the future. Drawing on a qualitative, interview study, I argue that young people are able to move imaginatively beyond the death of a parent, and in doing so, to maintain a sense of biographical continuity. While thinking about the future, most were able to generate an alternative to the ‘harm story’ typically associated with parental loss. Furthermore, the facility to engage with parental absence in the present enabled young people to make sense of living with dying, and gave meaning to their imagined futures. These findings suggest that young people's narratives of the future may act as a symbolic resource to draw on, albeit one requiring adequate material and social resources to construct. The paper extends the notion of continuing bonds derived from post‐bereavement accounts to suggest that relational experiences of the dead begin prior to bereavement, and may facilitate everyday living in anticipation of significant loss. Enabling young people to imaginatively explore the future may support them in getting by when they are living in these difficult family circumstances
'I thought they should know...that daddy is not completely gone' : a case study of sense-of-presence experiences in bereavement and family meaning-making
This study aimed to explore the experiences, responses and conceptualizations of sense of
presence experiences in bereavement in terms of family meaning-making. A case study
framework was chosen, using group and individual interviews and ethnographically-derived
observations in a father-bereaved family in the south of England. Interview data were analyzed
by applying both phenomenological and social constructionist perspectives to the same data
set. It was observed that there was a division between the mother, who had derived much
personal benefit from sense of presence experiences, and the children, who dismissed the
experiences as incompatible with their own worldviews and how they made sense of their
father’s death
Sensory and Quasi-Sensory Experiences of the Deceased in Bereavement:An Interdisciplinary and Integrative Review
Bereaved people often report having sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased (SED), and there is an ongoing debate over whether SED are associated with pathology, such as grief complications. Research into these experiences has been conducted in various disciplines, including psychiatry, psychology, and anthropology, without much crossover. This review brings these areas of research together, drawing on the expertise of an interdisciplinary working group formed as part of the International Consortium for Hallucination Research (ICHR). It examines existing evidence on the phenomenology, associated factors, and impact of SED, including the role of culture, and discusses the main theories on SED and how these phenomena compare with unusual experiences in other contexts. The review concludes that the vast majority of these experiences are benign and that they should be considered in light of their biographical, relational, and sociocultural contexts
‘My life's properly beginning’: young people with a terminally ill parent talk about the future
Effects of Light Pollution and Environmental Factors on Dawn Song Initiation Time of Great Tit, Parus major
The application of palynology in the interpretation of Brae Formation stratigraphy and reservoir geology in the South Brae Field area, British North Sea
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