TASK OF GRIEF WORKSHEET

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What is the theory behind the worksheet?

The following worksheet is called “Tasks of Grief.” It is based on William Worden’s grief model, which identifies four tasks that people tend to go through in the course of mourning. 

According to Worden (2009), these tasks offer a roadmap and a process through which such people can grieve in their own manner and pace. 

It has been defined as a process of accepting the new reality, experiencing pain of the loss, searching for its meaning, and finding a new way to manage emotions associated with death, as well as to find a connection with the deceased while adapting to the new reality. 

This structured manner can help to make grief more bearable since it is made into a more clear cut set of instructions.

How will the worksheet help?

It helps you accept a situation and support you in coming to terms with that issue, rather than avoiding it. It gives direction when the person is lost and overwhelmed with their grief to undertake a set of structured tasks which is what the worksheet basically does. 

It also assists in reducing the stigmatism of grieving by helping you inform that your encounters and feelings are typical and standard for an individual grieving.

Also, expressing your thoughts and feelings in writing can help you track your improvement and how much you have grown, which can, in turn, be helpful.

How to use the worksheet?

  • Find a quiet and comfortable place to work on the activity. Begin with the first task: some grieving people are not ready to or cannot accept the fact that their loved one is no longer alive. –
  •  Record the things that happened into your diary or write down in paper the ideas and the emotions related to the loss. Go on to managing the grief process by using any technique which will help to communicate your feelings appropriately. 
  • For the third task, enumerate the things you are doing to manage the changed environment where the loved one is no longer around and the new roles that the bereaved person is embracing. 
  • Last of all, discover how it is possible to stay connected with the deceased while still moving on. This might mean making new traditions, or learning how to participate in some kind of remembrance for them.

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