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         Bereavement Grief:     more books (100)
  1. The Wilderness of Grief: Finding Your Way (Understanding Your Grief) by Alan D. Wolfelt PhD, 2007-05-28
  2. This Thing Called Grief: New Understandings of Loss by Thomas M. Ellis, 2006-06-01
  3. Grief Counseling and Grief Therapy: A Handbook for the Mental Health Practitioner, Third Edition by J. William Worden, 2001-12-06
  4. Awakening from Grief: Finding the Way Back to Joy by John E. Welshons, 2003-08-01
  5. Awakening from Grief: Finding the Way Back to Joy by John E. Welshons, 2003-08-01
  6. Grief Steps Comanion Workbook and Journal by Brook Noel, 2004-10-01
  7. A Decembered Grief: Living with Loss While Others are Celebrating by Harold Ivan Smith, 1999-08-30
  8. Bereavement and Support: Healing in a Group Environment (Series in Death, Dying and Bereavement) by Marylou Hughes, 1995-04-01
  9. Healing Your Holiday Grief: 100 Practical Ideas for Blending Mourning and Celebration During the Holiday Season (Healing Your Grieving Heart series) by Alan D. Wolfelt PhD, 2005-12-01
  10. Men Don't Cry, Women Do: Transcending Gender Stereotypes of Grief (Series in Death, Dying and Bereavement) by Terry L. Martin, Kenneth J. Doka, 1999-12-01
  11. Getting to the Other Side of Grief: Overcoming the Loss of a Spouse by Robert C. De Vries, 1998-10-01
  12. Responding to Grief: Dying, Bereavement and Social Care by Caroline Currer, 2001-01
  13. Disenfranchised Grief: Recognizing Hidden Sorrow
  14. Seasons of Grief and Healing by James E. Miller, 2000-01

81. Counselling -on Grief Therapy
Person centered counselling; considerations and approaches for the grieving client. How and why bereaveme Category Health Mental Health Articles and Research...... upset).. grief ~the emotional response to bereavement sadness, guilt,rejection, fear, anger, self-worth, hopelessness.. mourning
http://www.geocities.com/eoa_cy/
BEREAVEMENT COUNSELLING
Statistically there appears to be a growing demand for bereavement counselling, and officially admittedly very poor training in it.
Introduction
Mourning, grieving, bereavement.. words synonymous to the lay person...
Loss of someone dear..  so painful, that it has found its way to lay dream interpretations as symbolising predicted sorrow.
Death's pain has always moved the lay person and the specialist alike -literarily as well as academically and  professionally.  The lay person, varying from culture to culture, has his traditions; the specialist, his researches and theories ~places are named after the dead and investigations carried into of out-of-body experiences -whether death is considered sad or joyous, physical or spiritual.. the interest continues, grows -whether the bond is broken with the dead or not those left behind are seriously affected by a need to adjust to the changes caused.
"If we go to the root of it," has said Dag Hammerskjold, "it is our concept of death that decides our answers to all the questions which life poses."  Jung agrees that "(...) when a human life comes to an end before our eyes.. the question of the meaning and worth of life never becomes more urgent..."
"...or agonising..." adds Jung ~and agree the composer and the poet and the story-teller,  as do the scientist and the monk -for Laing only hints at the effect: "You'll cry, when I die; you'll yawn, when I'm gone; you'll be bored, unadored."

82. Community Support For Grief And Bereavement | Project On Death In America
complicated bereavement. An important cause of needless suffering is the inadequacyof contemporary support for the experience and expression of grief.
http://www.soros.org/death/griefrfp.htm
PDIA Funding Initiatives
Awards to Palliative Care Fellowship Programs

Faculty Scholars Program

Social Work Leadership Development Awards
... Contact Us Search PDIA:
Note: PDIA is not currently funding this initiative
To learn about past funding in this area, click here

83. Community Support For Grief And Bereavement | Project On Death In America
This project will help homecare workers address the grief and bereavement difficultiesthey regularly experience in their work and improve the quality of care
http://www.soros.org/death/grief_funding.htm
Home What's New Featured Grantees Newsletters ... Contact Us Search PDIA:
American Hospice Foundation
Naomi Naierman
Washington, D.C.

The American Hospice Foundation will design and pilot test a model for school-based grief program in 14 schools in Phoenix, Arizona and then replicate the model in Oklahoma City and Washington D.C. The model will include training workshops for school personnel, after-school support programs for grieving students, and comprehensive curricula focusing on age-appropriate grief concepts. Balm of Gilead, Cooper Green Hospital
F. Amos Bailey
Birmingham, Alabama

The Balm of Gilead program, the palliative care initiative of the Cooper Green Hospital will identify the needs of the bereaved in a low-income population, develop collaborations and/or new resources to address the identified needs, and evaluate the effectiveness of different bereavement response strategies.
Baptist Health Systems of South Florida
Dale Young
Miami, Florida

84. Barr-Harris Children's Grief Center
Serves children who have lost a sibling; lost a parent through death, divorce, or abandonment; or Category Health Mental Health Children s grief...... Books, Etc. about Death, bereavement and grief. For Children and AdolescentsFor Parents and the General Public, including How Do We Tell the Children?
http://www.barrharris.org/
Barr-Harris
Children's
Grief Center There is help for children facing the pain of death, divorce, separation, or abandonment.
The Barr-Harris Center serves:
  • Children who have lost a parent through death, divorce, or abandonment.
  • Children who have lost a sibling or other family member through death.
  • Children with a parent or other family member facing imminent death.
  • Parents and other family members.
The Center provides:
  • Diagnostic evaluations of the child, parent, or other family members.
  • Short and long-term treatment if needed.
  • Child guidance to the surviving parent or custodial adult
  • Educational presentations to schools, agencies, community groups and self-help groups.
  • Consultation and in-service training to agencies, clinics, hospitals, schools and children's institutions.
The Barr-Harris Center is affiliated with the Institute for Psychoanalysis. Although the Center has a set fee for services, a sliding scale of fees may be used so that no family is denied services for financial reasons. Coming Events in the Chicago Area Barr-Harris Children's Grief Center Barr-Harris Locations for Services
History of the Barr-Harris Center

Support the Barr-Harris Center

Contact Us
Books, Etc. about Death, Bereavement and Grief

85. University Of Teesside - Department Of Student Services
directory for support services. bereavement (grief and loss), CHILDDEATH HELPLINE, C/O Great Ormond St HospitalGreat Ormand St.London
http://www.tees.ac.uk/mentalhealth/support/directory/bereavement.html
support portfolio of opportunities where to go for support directory for support services directory for support advocacy/advice (general) alcohol and drug use/misuse anxiety/panic attacks bereavement (grief and loss) ... download directory of support services directory for support services bereavement (grief and loss) CHILD DEATH HELPLINE C/O Great Ormond St HospitalGreat Ormand St.London, WC1N 3JH Telephone:
Helpline for anyone affected by the death of a child. Offers befriending, advice, information, counselling, listening and referrals. COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS 53 North StreetBristol, BS3 1EN Telephone:
Helpline for bereaved parents, offering support and listening.

86. Bereavement - The Process Of Grieving A Loss
Concise factsheets explaining bereavement.Category Health Mental Health Articles and Research...... bereavement means, literally, to be deprived by death. After someone close to youdies, you go through a process of mourning. grief is the visible sign of that
http://hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/mosby_factsheets/Bereavement.html
search ABC of health health news healthy living medicines ... A-Z of health Bereavement What is bereavement? Bereavement means, literally, to be deprived by death. After someone close to you dies, you go through a process of mourning. Grief is the visible sign of that mourning and encompasses a wide range of physical and emotional symptoms that you experience after a loss. Bereavement is not restricted to people who have lost someone they have known for a long time. It is also experienced by people who have had stillbirths, miscarriages or lost a young baby. Is it normal to grieve? Grief is vital in order to accept a deep loss and carry on with your life. If you do not grieve at the time of death, or shortly after, you may keep the grief bottled up inside you. This may cause emotional problems or physical illness later on. Working through your grief can be a painful process, but it makes all the difference to your future emotional and physical well-being. What are the stages of grief?

87. Cancer.gov - Loss, Grief, And Bereavement (PDQ®)
As with bereavement, grief processes are dependent on the nature of the relationshipwith the person lost, the situation surrounding the loss, and one's
http://www.nci.nih.gov/cancerinfo/pdq/supportivecare/bereavement/healthprofessio
Two versions of this document are available. Select a tab below to switch between versions.
Date Last Modified: 03/19/2003
Loss, Grief, and Bereavement
Overview
Health care providers will encounter grieving individuals throughout their personal and professional lives.[ ] The progression from the final stages of cancer to the death of a loved one is experienced in different ways by different individuals. In fact, one may find that the cancer experience, although it is difficult and trying, has led to significant personal growth. Coping with death is usually not an easy process and cannot be dealt with in a "cookbook" fashion. The way in which a person will grieve depends on the personality of the grieving individual and his or her relationship with the person who died. The cancer experience, the manner of disease progression, one's cultural and religious beliefs, coping skills and psychiatric history, the availability of support systems, and one's socioeconomic status also affect how a person will cope with grief. Distinguishing between the following terms is important: grief, mourning, and bereavement. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, yet often with different intentions.[

88. Cancer.gov - Loss, Grief, And Bereavement (PDQ®)
As with bereavement, grief processes depend on the relationship with the personwho died, the situation surrounding the death, and the person's attachment to
http://www.nci.nih.gov/cancerinfo/pdq/supportivecare/bereavement/patient/
Two versions of this document are available. Select a tab below to switch between versions.
Date Last Modified: 10/10/2002
Loss, Grief, and Bereavement
Introduction
This patient summary on loss, grief, and bereavement is adapted from the summary written for health professionals by cancer experts. This and other credible information about cancer treatment, screening, prevention, supportive care, and ongoing clinical trials, is available from the National Cancer Institute. The passage from the final stage of cancer to the death of a loved one is different for everyone. This summary describes loss, grief, and bereavement, the stages of grief, and methods for coping with grief. This summary also includes sections on children and grief.
Overview
People cope with the loss of a loved one in many ways. For some, the experience may lead to personal growth, even though it is a difficult and trying time. There is no right way of coping with death. The way a person grieves depends on the personality of that person and the relationship with the person who has died. How a person copes with grief is affected by the experience with cancer, the way the disease progressed, the person's cultural and religious background, coping skills, mental history, support systems, and the person's social and financial status. The terms grief, bereavement, and mourning are often used in place of each other, but they have different meanings.

89. Bereavement Support
N., grief Counsellor bereavement Services Support Education Telephone 905-628-6008Fax 905-628-5842 Website www.bereavement.net. Webmaster ve3ak@rac.ca.
http://www.bereavement.net/
C heryl McQueen, M.A. Reg. N,
Grief Counsellor
Telephone: (905) 628-6008
Fax: (905) 628-5842 18 Suter Crescent
Dundas, Ontario
Canada L9H 6R5
Email Cheryl
Home Page Bereavement Services
An organization dedicated to the provision of professional grief counselling and support services in the Golden Horseshoe Area of Ontario, Canada.
Our Mission
We offer support groups, private counselling, educational seminars, and workshops tailored to the needs of the bereaved and those who wish to learn more about the grief process.
Private and group counselling can be arranged for children and adults.
Contact Information
For more infomation or to register for a "Support Group" contact Cheryl McQueen.
Telephone: 905-628-6008 or Fax: 905-628-5842 Electronic Mail
General Information: Cheryl McQueen
Last modified: 10/28/02 C ourtesy of: Cheryl McQueen M.A., Reg. N., Grief Counsellor Telephone: Fax: Website: www.bereavement.net

90. Association For Pet Loss And Bereavement
Information on pet loss and bereavement.Category Recreation Pets Loss...... are compassionate pet lovers who have experienced grief over the loss of a belovedpet, and come to us to learn about themselves and their special bereavement.
http://www.aplb.org/
Have you ever lost a beloved companion animal? Or do you know someone who has, and could use some expert guidance?
The APLB is a compassionate non-profit organization dedicated to helping people during this very special kind of bereavement. We are constantly improving and publicizing all the services available, concerning the loss of a pet. The APLB is the only organization in the world doing this.
Many of the founders of this organization are established authors and counselors in this developing field. Their enthusiasm and expertise have helped create our amazing growth and success. But about half of our members are not professionals. They are compassionate pet lovers who have experienced grief over the loss of a beloved pet, and come to us to learn about themselves and their special bereavement. And in our chat rooms many hundreds have already accomplished this, while being supportive of others who also grieve. The APLB offers a wide variety of approaches to healing from pet bereavement. We welcome anyone who would like to be part of our wonderful, caring community.
Regular bimonthly meetings are held, to keep our objectives updated and in sharp focus. There will always be positions here for individuals who have the ability and desire to help us grow. Because of the enthusiastic response to what we are doing, several regional chapters are currently being established across the world. This is an idea whose time has finally come, and the APLB was created to do something about it. We are here to help, and eagerly welcome new friends and members. We are rapidly becoming a major worldwide institution, and invite your membership at this stage in our development. Please join with us as one of our supporters in this wonderful movement.

91. Bereavement - Help Is At Hand
p p from CRUSE (see above). Facing grief bereavement and the youngadult by Susan Wallbank £7.99 inc. p p from CRUSE (see above).
http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/info/help/bereav/
The Royal College of Psychiatrists Charity Registration Number 228636 Contents: Introduction
Grieving

Children and adolescents

How can friends and relatives help?
... Search
Bereavement is a distressing but common experience. Sooner or later most of us will suffer the death of someone we love. Yet in our everyday life we think and talk about death very little, perhaps because we encounter it less often than our grandparents did. For them, the death of a brother or sister, friend or relative, was a common experience in their childhood or teenage years. For us, these losses usually happen later in life. So, we do not have much of a chance either to learn about grieving - how it feels, what are the right things to do, what is 'normal' - or to come to terms with it. In spite of this we have to cope when we are finally faced with the death of someone we love. In this leaflet you will find information about some of the ways in which people grieve after such a loss, about the ways in which bereaved people can get stuck in the grieving process, and the help available. Grieving takes place after any sort of loss, but most powerfully after the death of someone we love. It is not just one feeling, but a whole succession of feelings, which take a while to get through and which cannot be hurried.

92. Advice On Grief And Bereavement - Yale-New Haven Hospital
Helpful advice from the department of Social Work on grief and bereavement,brought to you by YaleNew Haven Hospital.
http://www.ynhh.org/patients/mourning.html
Page Contents
Reactions
Complications

Children

Resources

Search this site for:
Site Contents

Medical professionals

Yale-New Haven

Children's Hospital

Yale-New Haven
... Press information Phone Numbers Directory assistance Patient Information Adult emergency Children's emergency Admitting Children's admitting Psychiatric admitting Common reactions to trauma, grief and bereavement
  • Shock and Denial. Feeling numb, stunned and dazed are healthy and normal reactions. Often, it is difficult to “take in” information. The appetite may disappear. People often feel completely exhausted, yet unable to sleep. The reverse may occur where people sleep most of the time. Feelings may range from fear and anxiety to guilt and depression. There are times some may feel they are going crazy. It is healthy to express true feelings in this stage. Some people find relief in crying and/or talking to others.
  • Searching and Yearning.
  • Disorientation and Disorganization. The appetite is poor, people lack motivation, have impaired judgment and experience insomnia. As the bereaved struggle to be relieved of disorientation there is a search to find the answer that feels right to them. A listening ear is the greatest gift to the bereaved. Society expects mourners to be healed quickly and support is often lacking after a short time. Others tend to avoid talking about the person who has died, when that is the thing that helps the bereaved most. During disorientation the self-image is lowered and the mourner often isolates himself/herself from others.

93. Home Page For About.com's Death And Dying Site
Links for the grieving widow, widower, child, teen and adult. Dedicated to the bereaved, the dying Category Health Mental Health grief, Loss and bereavement...... grief Journal A powerful journaling selfguided retreat book to help you move towardpeace and acceptance of the Discount bereavement fares when you pre-plan.
http://dying.about.com/
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In The Spotlight Fri, Apr 4, 2003
The Transition Phase of Grief

The transition phase of grief is defined as the period of time between death of a loved one and the bereaved’s acceptance of that death. Learn what makes this period difficult. Discussion: Grandfather's Death - Others Don't Understand My Grief! Discussion: Multiple Losses - Boyfriend and Mother, It Is Too Much! Helping Children and Teens with Grief Children and teens often have difficulty expressing their feelings after loss. This series of articles helps you understand the challenge that awaits them and how they can cope. Discussion: Fear of Death - Why Can't I Stop Thinking About It?

94. Journey Thru Grief
A personal account of how one woman recovered from the loss of her small child and then her husband years later. Contains inspiration and encouragement thru the experience of bereavement, chat and message board.
http://grief_journey.tripod.com/griefjourney/index.html
Journey Thru Grief About Me Our Story Early Days First Weeks ... Contact Me Welcome to Journey Thru Grief. Journey Thru Grief is a personal account of what I have learned thru my experiences of grieving the lost of loved ones. I hope to be able to share how I am surviving widowhood and the personal strengths I have found within me.
On the About Me page, the "doorway" to my site, I'll introduce myself and talk about the reasons for wanting to share my experiences. If my site gives even one person hope and inspiration to see the light and love, then my efforts in developing and sharing this site was worth it.
Please sign my guestbook with any comments or reactions you have to my site. You can also contact me privately. I love to get mail! Jerry and I were married in a small ceremony in a small chapel. This is one of the few wedding photos that was taken. One year, he ran out of ideas so this picture showed up on a mug. What's New? WEBRINGS - 04/07/02 A new page has been added to this site to include the Webrings I belong to. Please be sure to check them out as they do have alot to offer. Check back often as I continue to post my experiences and add new areas.

95. Coping With The 5 Stages Of Grief And Bereavement
How to cope with grief and bereavement. What the 5 stages of grief and bereavment are. Coping with loss.Category Health Mental Health Articles and Research......How to cope with grief and bereavement. My thanks goes to all who helped mein discussions of what grief and bereavement can mean to a person.
http://www.york-united-kingdom.co.uk/funerals/grief/
What is grief?
When grieving due to a loss or bereavement there are considered to be 5 stages
In this document I am simply outlining what my experience of grieving for a loved one has meant to me. Grieving is a very personal experience for everyone. No one human can or should tell you how to grieve. That is not the intent here. I hope this will help you identify what you are feeling. Also it is to let you know you are not alone with how you are feeling. I found it very helpful to have caring people around me to help me. At some time in life we all feel loss and must find a way to cope with it.
If you have greived for someone and wish to add your experiences here so as to help others understand, please do not hesitate to Email us.
1) DENIAL
In the denial stage we refuse to believe what has happened. We try in our mind to tell ourselves that life is as it was before our loss. We can even make believe to an extent by re enacting rituals that we used to go through with our loved one. Making an extra cup of tea for our loved one who is no longer there, rushing back to tell someone that you have met an old friend. Flashing back to times and conversations in the past as though they we here with us now. They can all be part of this stage.
2) ANGER
We get angry. The anger can manifest itself in many ways. We can blame others for our loss. We can become easily agitated having emotional outbursts. We can even become angry with ourselves. Care must be taken here not to turn this anger inwards. Release of this anger is a far better way to cope with grief in my experience.

96. Soras Corporation;grief Loss And Bereavement:creative Memory Album, Effective St
Providing sympathy, death and dying relief, bereavement gifts, and inspirational messages.Category Health Mental Health grief, Loss and bereavement......Sympathy, death and dying relief, pet loss, grief and bereavement gifts. Sympathy,death and dying relief, pet loss, grief and bereavement gifts.
http://www.soras.com/
Offering Customized Bereavement Gifts and Celebration Gifts
Memory Boxes, Memory Albums, Inspirational and Supportive Book . . .
Soras Corporation is committed to celebrating life and death. The two are
inseparable. Memories of life's events allow us to cherish shared moments.
With a loss - human or pet loss - memory boxes and memory albums
assist us in moving from grief to memories . In celebrations, they assist us in
reliving special shared moments, such as a wedding, anniversary celebrations,
family reunions, birth of a child, etc. As we believe in the value of each living
soul, every artistic item prepared for you is one of a kind. Much of the
proceeds goes toward assisting organizations and individuals facing grief.
Soras Mailing List
Free Newsletter
Subscribe Unsubscribe For information, call 301-625-6991 or fax to 301-625-6992. Write to mail@soras.com

97. Cancer Care - Managing Your Cancer - Bereavement Grief -
bereavement and grief.
http://www.cancercare.org/managing/grief/index.asp

98. Kearl's Guide To The Sociology Of Death: Death's Personal Impacts
Sociological paper about death and grieving.Category Health Mental Health Articles and Research...... bereavement AND grief. Three key concepts thanatologists employ to understand thoseaffected by the death of others are bereavement, grief, and mourning.
http://www.trinity.edu/~mkearl/death-6.html
P ERSONAL I MPACTS OF D EATH
When a person is born, we rejoice, and when they're married, we jubilate,
but when they die, we try to pretend that nothing happened.
Margaret Mead Odd as it sounds, there can be little question that some deaths are better than others. People cross-culturally have always made invidious distinctions between good deaths and bad. Compare, for instance, crooner Bing Crosby's sudden death following eighteen rounds of his beloved golf with the slow motion, painful expiration of an eighty-year-old diabetic. Bedridden following the amputation of his leg, the old man eventually began slipping in and out of consciousness. This continues over a period of years, exhausting the emotional, physical. and financial resources of his family. The essence of a "good death" thus involves the needs of the dying (such as coming at the end of full and completed lives, and when death is preferred to continued existence) as well as those of their survivors and the broader society. Whereas the prevalence of unanticipated and premature deaths led to preindustrial cultures to focus death fears on individuals' postmortem fates, the death fears of modern cultures are more likely to focus on the processes of dying. Thus contemporary fears of dying involve the anxieties of dying within institutional settings, where often life is structured for the convenience of staff and where residents suffer both physical and psychological pain in their depersonalization. They also involve fears of being victims of advanced Alzheimer's Disease: being socially dead and yet biologically alive. In sum, the dreaded liminality between the worlds of the living and the dead have historically shifted from the period after death to the period preceding it.

99. Grief
A brief description of grief in bereavement and some of the support servicesavailable to bereaved persons. Coping with bereavement and grief.
http://oasis.gov.ie/death/grief.html
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Coping with Bereavement and Grief
Although everyone's personal reaction to a bereavement is different, most people experience some of the following emotional responses when someone close to them dies:
  • Disbelief Shock Anger Sadness Relief Guilt Depression Anxiety Despair Longing Loneliness
These emotions normally occur, however, some or more of these responses may be experienced for differing lengths of time, depending on the individual. The main initial responses to a death - even one that has long been expected - are disbelief, shock and anger. These may lessen in time and can be followed by a sense of guilt, depression, anxiety and despair. You may also feel an acute sense of longing for the dead person, hopelessness at the thought of their absence, loneliness and sadness at their loss or even a sense of relief that they are gone (which may, in turn, lead to feelings of guilt). Some physical symptoms experienced after bereavement can be quite acute and distressing. It is important to realise that these are normal parts of the grieving process and will pass in time. Physical reactions may include:

100. Bereavement, Grief, Memorials
Sherri lost her 8-1/2 month struggle with Leukemia and bone marrow transplant.Category Health Conditions and Diseases Personal Pages...... whys' and battled our guilt, and survived those griefstricken years order forms aredisplayed on ‘interest tables' at many bereavement conferences throughout
http://home.earthlink.net/~saland/
    'LOVED AND REMEMBERED'
    Sherri Alise Landsman
    Personalized Memorial Tributes After
    The Death, and In Memory, of a Loved-One
    Dear Bereaved Family, We are so sorry for the loss that has affected your lives. Our 23-year old daughter, Sherri, died December 2, 1990, after her 8-1/2 month struggle with leukemia and bone marrow transplant. As bereaved parents, we are always looking for ways to keep 'alive' her memory and her name. While driving in my car one day, I imagined the car in front of me bearing a bumper-sticker with Sherri's name on it. I then envisioned other cars bearing a 'monument' to other loved-ones whom have passed on. It was with that visualization and many tears that the 'Loved and Remembered' Bumper-Stickers evolved. We then created Return Address Labels and Note Cards with Sherri's picture on them for our own use, and were asked by other families to make these items available for them also. We created these tributes with love and in our daughter's memory, and continue to keep the costs as low as possible, to 'give back' to our bereaved family community. We hope that these personalized memorials on the following pages bring a level of comfort to you, your family, and your friends, in helping to keep your loved-one's memory and name 'alive'. Following the order forms for the memorial tributes is "Odyssey of a Bereaved Parent" (on page 5) which contains my thoughts and poems since our daughter's death. I think you will be able to relate to some of my writings as you travel your journey of grief. Please feel free to print this out and make any copies and distribute if you wish.

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