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"Robbie’s writing is impeccable, and her expertise in providing comfort and support to the bereaved invaluable. Robbie's How to Say It® When You Don't Know What to Say series is essential reading for anyone who's ever had a friend, acquaintance or family member suffer a loss." Jessica Campbell, Executive Producer at Legacy.com, the leader in the online memorial and obituary market. |
| Supporting the Bereaved After a Suicide
By Robbie Miller Kaplan
Monday, 26 July 2010 17:38
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A member of my community took his life. It was a sudden and traumatic loss and while some people treated his widow with kindness, she shared that she was unprepared for the hurtful actions of others. For example, she saw a friend walking towards her one morning in our small town. The friend saw her too and she quickly crossed the street to avoid her. A colleague also shared a hurtful experience following the suicide of her physician brother. Though she was just a child, she vividly remembers the sound of her neighbor’s footsteps as she crossed their wooden porch. When her mother answered the loud knock, the neighbor asked, “Jean, how’d he do it?” It’s shocking to hear that someone has taken their life but even more shocking to learn that people do not give the bereaved the same support they give for other deaths. Why should we shy away from someone who is grieving just because their loved one took their life? As one widow stated, “My husband was a good man and lived a good life; he just chose to end it badly.” |






