SIRA: Grief and Bereavement

Grief is complex, layered and often confusing. To help us to better understand grief, leading expert Sidney Zisook, MD, Department of Psychiatry at UCSD, walks us through the painful but ultimately healing process that follows loss. Included is a discussion about persistent acute grief and major depression. Series: “SIRA (Sam and Rose Stein Institute for Research on Aging)” [12/2007] [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 12290]
Video Rating: 4 / 5

25 comments to SIRA: Grief and Bereavement

  • aishakafeel  says:

    I wouldn’t be able to love anyone else if I was to become a widow. I am a woman of only one man and to me, love and marriage is for the whole life and after… ;* Unhappy marriages where only one spouse loves and the other does not, do not count… ;P ;/- lol…

  • aishakafeel  says:

    True. Only if we don’t love, we don’t grief, either… :-(

  • NmkjiPlmnz  says:

    Meet Russian women ** leefoxnow.info **

  • shockthesky  says:

    most psychiatrists just give grieving people a drug as if a drug can bring my wife back from the dead and comfort me.

  • MessiStyles  says:

    58 min how?

  • laysea65  says:

    I must be to the extreme as when my mom died I fell apart, went into the worst depths of depression and even got so sick that it almost killed me. I stopped living and it’s been 9 yrs since I lost my mom whom it wasn’t expected and she was 53 yrs old and she was my everything so I wonder why I am still stuck in my darkness of grief and depression. It doesn’t go away or when ppl tell me you need to get over it makes me angry as how do you just get over it?

  • AJHcorolla  says:

    nurses get about 10 hours each year per year of study

  • sheelajacks07  says:

    Good grief or bad grief? Oh I forgot. Doctors only had 1 measly hour to study this in med school and it could take yeeears to investigate. Most of their time is spent barring cures and getting richer and richer killing people with dangerous drugs.

  • sheelajacks07  says:

    There is no correct way to grieve. Different cultures have their way of grieving. Who came up with the 2 month grief limit? That is insane. They forget the Holidays! the birthdays and the family gatherings, all this can take years to deal with depending on the person.

  • ADyingFaith  says:

    If someone is still depressed after two months, i think that is very normal. The person has gone forever and is never coming back. That is enough to destroy a person.

  • muskndusk  says:

    Brilliant presentation of a difficult subject. Helped me to understand the price of repressing grief and avoiding tears.

  • Arnebananlolo  says:

    Wtf.
    I wanted to see people ruining other people’s games, not this! O_o

  • goddogcattac696  says:

    you should give your boss’s wife a bereavement of their own then.

  • Superbird281  says:

    I wish workplaces took bereavement more seriously. My workplace gives 3 days. That’s enough time to plan a funeral, but not much else.

  • newarrior3000  says:

    Well, maybe you could make your own video :-)

    i don’t know how to glam up loss :) -

  • gabe0083  says:

    I just meant the video was boring, which is irrelevent to me losing anyone

  • newarrior3000  says:

    The presenter rocks !@

  • newarrior3000  says:

    I agree most adults are walking dumbshits

  • newarrior3000  says:

    Gabe: Are you a moron, immature ? Haven’t experienced loss ? You will–

  • newarrior3000  says:

    I LOVE THIS !

    We live in an ill society that denies death–

    No one wants to feel

    We live in a society of addicts who hate to feel

    Would love to hear from any midlife orphans !

  • Chocolateluvr1987  says:

    I disagree with the point he makes about traumatic loss. It is very much dependent on the individual, and the loss of a parent can be traumatic if the illness is sudden/complicated or involves intense behavioural changes, etc. Trauma is partly determined by a diathesis towards such a reaction, and by the subjective reaction of helplessness towards the circumstances.
    I also agree with clairobic’s point about not being “allowed” to grieve, and the peculiar scripts for “grief” we have here.

  • Abbabble  says:

    Helpful video for letting me know what to expect for myself, and what to watch for in my recently-widowed mother. The presenter was very frank but very sensitive.

  • gabe0083  says:

    zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

  • MsMomo63  says:

    I was diciplined at work for grieving the loss of my husband. I was “distracting” my co-workers and was threatened to be fired if I did not comply. This was 2 months into at least a 2 year grieving period.

  • clairobics  says:

    Doesn’t deal enough with, not being “allowed” to grieve if you are in an intensely positive “depended upon” profession such as teaching. I don’t feel I have been “allowed” to grief because of work yet and looking forward to the school holidays, simply to be able to be myself again and shed the odd tear!
    Some colleagues DON’T seem to understand WHY you might be sad and sometimes I would like to just shout at them “Don’t you know my mum has just died!”

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