Recovery From grief and loss for suicidal personshttps://metanoia.org/suicide/grief.htm
The progress we make in bereavement recovery invariably remains with us. All of us will experience more losses in the future. Members of bereavement support groups learn how to be
Many suicidal people are grieving a loss; it can help to know how to resolve your grief.
The (alleged) value of melancholy: Jacky Bowring's "A Field Guide to Melancholy" reviewed by Ian Pindarhttps://www.biopsychiatry.com/depression/melancholy.html
it as "abnormal bereavement" or "psychotic depression", inelegant solutions for something that Bowring seeks to reclaim as "a rich dimension of human existence". She is an advocat
Mood-brighteners and antidepressants as conceived by ChatGPThttps://www.biopsychiatry.com/chatgpt/
it removed the "bereavement exclusion" clause, which had prevented the diagnosis of MDD within two months of the loss of a loved one (unless the symptoms were severe or persistent
Suicidal thoughts: How serious is our condition?https://metanoia.org/suicide/serious.htm
is to attend suicide bereavement support groups. Listen to relatives and friends describe the lives of the people they lost to suicide . Some completed suicides had no prior attem
Suicidal people and those around them tend toward denial of the seriousness of the situation.
Is It Really Good To Be Sad?https://www.biopsychiatry.com/depression/sadbad.html
a normal reaction to bereavement. Some, however, say that bereavement isn't the only type of grief that should be left out of a diagnosis of depression. Jerome Wakefield of New Yo
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