

When you combine experiences of stress and trauma to grief, it is overwhelming. While there are consistent elements within each stage, the process of grieving looks different for everyone. These stages are our attempts to process change and protect ourselves while we adapt to a new reality. Persistent, traumatic grief can cause us to cycle (sometimes quickly) through the stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance. Grief is typically conceptualized as a reaction to death, though it can occur anytime reality is not what we wanted, hoped for, or expected. There are many losses to grieve amidst the intensity of civil unrest, on top of more typical stressors like taking finals and looking for a job.Įlisabeth Kubler-Ross developed the five stages of grief in her 1969 book, On Death and Dying. The recent death of George Floyd has put police brutality, murders of Black and Brown people, racial and social injustice into the spotlight. It has caused the loss of lives around the globe, as well as the loss of normalcy. The pandemic has impacted our routines, social lives, school, work, and more. Posted by Caitlin Stanaway, Psy.D., Licensed Psychologist, UWCC International students and cultural shock.

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