VI. Steps to resolve blocked despair
Step 1. Take an honest inventory of your behavioral response to the target loss; identify your inappropriate or unhealthy responses to despair. If you find you have unresolved despair, go to Step 2.
Step 2. Identify the irrational beliefs blocking the resolution of your despair.
Step 3. Systematically refute each irrational belief keeping you from resolving your despair.
Step 4. Seek help from someone to assist you in dealing with your irrational beliefs openly and honestly. Such helpers can include:
· parents
· a trusted relative or friend
· a church person
· an allied health professional
· a mental health professional
Step 5. In working with a helper, share the cause of your despair. Be free to reveal your inner pain and turmoil. Do not hold back the emotional tide. Trust the helper to respect your emotional response. Ask the helper to provide a “rational” thinking and emotional approach to the loss.
Step 6. With the assistance of the helper, imagine or picture the loss and allow yourself to feel the pain and hurt of your experience. Use this simulation to bring out your feelings of despair. Bring the simulation to closure by substituting a rational response to the loss, such as:
· Forgiveness - forgive the real or perceived perpetrators of your loss.
· Permission giving - give permission to yourself and others to suffer the loss appropriately and to adjust to the changes resulting from it.
· Guilt reduction - free yourself from the guilt that is exacerbating your pain and despair.
· Gentleness and kindness - treat yourself and others kindly and softly, don't be hard on yourself or others, give up trying to be so “perfect.”
· Transferring of responsibility - give up the need to carry the responsibility for others' feelings and reactions, free yourself to be more open and honest in the response to your loss.
· Recognition of self-worth - allow yourself to believe that you deserve to grieve openly, you have the right to adjust to the resulting change, and the right to be given the understanding and respect of others as your cope with your loss.
Step 7. If, in working with your helper, you are unable to resolve your despair, return to Step one. Use a professionally trained helper, e.g., a mental health counselor, in addressing this unresolved despair. Shop around, if necessary, for someone with whom you can relate.
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