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Sibling bereavement: helping children cope with loss (Second edition.)

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The emotional effect of losing a brother or sister can result in severe trauma for a child.

Many children find it difficult to mourn a lost sibling, and parents can have a hard time helping their children while they themselves are mourning.Written from personal experience, this book insists that there is no 'right' way for parents to behave towards surviving children.

It looks at the many and various effects of sibling bereavement as it bears upon the whole family: the repercussions of lack of support; surviving children who act as comforters to their parents; guilt; projections of anger; unresolved conflicts; consequent family relationships; and children who can't or won't mourn.The author uses real-life case studies to illustrate her points, and clarification of the issues involved is provided throughout by the views of an experienced psychologist who has worked with disturbed children.

While remaining non-prescriptive, the book is a guide to achieving a 'healthy' mourning process, enabling individuals to move forward, even though life can never be the same again.Ann Farrant is a freelance journalist, writer and researcher.

She has worked in many branches of the media - newspaper, magazines and BBC Television.

In the 1970s she was a founder member of Cruse Bereavement Care in Norwich; she has also worked as a volunteer fund-raiser for the children's charity UNICEF.

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£4.95
Product Details
The Endless Bookcase Ltd
1908941464 / 9781908941466
eBook (EPUB)
06/08/2015
175 pages
Copy: 40%; print: 40%