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Suddenly Single? The 5 Stages
of Grief
Death of a spouse or breakup of a marriage or
long-term relationship can trigger similar responses
in a person. Each person mourns a loss differently.
However, there are 5 common stages of grief a person
goes through when mourning the loss of a
relationship. These were adapted from Elizabeth
Kubler-Ross, 'On Death and Dying'
You may not experience these stages in one fluid
order. You may go through some of the stages more
than once. Sometimes an event will trigger you to
experience one of these stages again. For instance,
cleaning out the basement and finding an old shirt
of your deceased spouse or hearing your ex-partner
is to remarry might cause reoccurrence of certain
stages. The five stages of grief are:
1. Denial – The "No, not me" stage.
This stage is filled with disbelief and denial.
If your partner has died you still expect him to
walk through the door. If your partner has asked for
a break-up you think that she will change her mind.
2. Anger/Resentment – The "Why me?" stage.
Anger at the situation, your partner and others
are common. You are angry with the other person for
causing the situation and for causing you pain. You
might feel anger at your deceased partner for dying.
You may feel anger at your partner for asking for a
divorce and breaking up the family.
3. Bargaining – The "If I do this, you’ll do
that" stage.
You try to negotiate to change the situation. If
you’ve lost a spouse to death you might bargain with
God, "I’ll be a better person if you’d just bring
him back". You might approach your partner who is
asking for the break-up and say "If you’ll stay I’ll
change".
4. Depression - The "It's really happened" stage.
You realize the situation isn’t going to change.
The death or break-up happened and there is nothing
to bring the other person back. Acknowledgement of
the situation often bring depression. This could be
a quiet, withdrawn time as you soak in the
situation.
5. Acceptance – The "This is what happened" stage.
Though you haven’t forgotten what happened you
are able to begin to move forward.
Suggestions when you find yourself suddenly
single:
Avoid long term legal decisions. If you
are in an emotional state its better to put off long
term legal decisions until your thinking is less
cloudy.
Drive carefully. It’s easy to become
distracted when you are grieving so use care when
you get behind the wheel.
Seek support for your kids and yourself.
Your kids are grieving along with you and will need
support. It might be wise at this point to have
separate grief sessions apart from your children if
you're experiencing anger and resentment.
Maintain rituals. The children most likely
will feel insecure and abandoned at first.
Maintaining the same patterns of holidays,
birthdays, Saturday outings, etc. will give them a
sense of normalcy and consistency.
Nurture yourself. You need to care for
your spiritual, emotional and physical health. No
one else will do it but you. Take care of yourself
as well as you take care of your child. Eat healthy,
exercise and take vitamins. Allow yourself to grieve
and give yourself as much time as you need to adjust
to what has happened.
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