
HELPING YOUR CHILD’S BRAIN GROW STRONGER…..


For several decades, psychiatrists who work with the dying have been trying to come up with new psychotherapies that can help people cope with the reality of their death. One of these therapies asks the dying to tell the story of their life.
This end of life treatment, called dignity therapy, was created by a man named Harvey Chochenoff. When Chochenoff was a young psychiatrist working with the dying, he had a really powerful experience with one of the patients he was trying to counsel, a man with an inoperable brain tumor.
“One of the last times that I went into his room to meet with him, on his bedside table was a photograph of him when he had indeed been young and healthy and a body builder, and it was this incredible juxtaposition of these two images,” says Chochenoff.
So in the bed there’s his patient — this skeleton of a man — very pale and weak. On the bedside table, there’s this image, this portrait of a glistening muscled giant. And Chochenoff says that sitting there, it was very clear to him that by placing this photograph in such a prominent position, the man was sending a message: This was how he needed to be seen.
As Chochenoff continued his work with the dying, he confronted this again and again: this need people have to assert themselves in the face of death. And he started to wonder about it.
“Why is it that how people perceive themselves to be seen should have such a profound influence? How does that make sense? What does that mean?” says Chochenoff.
To read or hear more click on: http://www.npr.org/2011/09/12/140336146/for-the-dying-a-chance-to-rewrite-life


‘Jesse Bering‘s mother died of cancer on a Sunday, in her own bed, at 9 o’clock at night. Bering and his siblings closed her door and went downstairs, hoping they might somehow get some sleep.
It was a long, hard night, but around 7 a.m., something happened: The wind chimes outside his mother’s window started to chime.
Bering remembers waking to the tinkle of these bells, a small but distinct sound in an otherwise silent house. And he remembers thinking that those bells carried a very specific message.
“It seemed to me … that she was somehow telling us that she had made it to the other side. You know, cleared customs in heaven,” Bering says.
The thought surprised him. Bering was a confirmed atheist. He did not believe in any kind of supernatural anything. He prided himself on being a scientist, a psychologist who believed only in the measurable material world. But, he says, he simply couldn’t help himself.
“My mind went there. It leapt there,”‘
For much more to hear or read click on:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129528196

OR KNOW SOMEONE WHO IS?
CHECK THESE SITES OUT: CLICK ON:
OVEREATING? http://www.oa.org/new-to-oa/twelve-steps.php
OVERSMOKING? http://www.quit-smoking.net/12-steps.html
OVERDRINKING? http://www.12step.org/


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http://pol.moveon.org/insurance_execs/?id=17290-10606714-1jET2dx&t=2
To see the other stages click on: Summary Chart*Introduction to Stages*Biography*Critiques& Controversies*References & OtherLinks
Age: Late Adulthood — 65 years to deathConflict: Integrity vs. DespairImportant Event: Reflection on
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The most important event at this stage is coming to accept one’s whole lifeand reflecting on that life in a positive manner. According to Erikson,achieving a sense of integrity means fully accepting oneself and coming to termswith the death. Accepting responsibility for your life and being able to undothe past and achieve satisfaction with self is essential. The inability to dothis results in a feeling of despair.
The adult feels a sense of fulfillment about life and accepts death as anunavoidable reality.
Individuals who are unable to obtain a feeling of fulfillment andcompleteness will despair and fear death.
An aged person may find it necessary to reflect and analyze what they haveaccumulated throughout life and decide what offspring will receive from themupon death.
| Critiques& Criticisms | SummaryChart |
| Introductionto Stages | Eriksonhome page |
It was not easy selling the house we all grew up in, especially with a new generation of family having recently arrived who will want to see the house we grew up in. But we had no choice.
Which is why I’m in favor of this new health care reform proposal being debated in Congress, with a public option where people such as my parents who couldn’t afford standard health insurance can buy coverage from the government at a much lower cost.
I don’t know how anyone can be against a public option. Those against it say it’s socialized medicine, when in truth you don’t have to purchase the public option if you already have and are currently satisfied with your present coverage. With the public option in the market, and judging by the laws of economics, the rates to your coverage will most likely go down because of the public option creating competition in the market.
If we had this public option when my parents were alive, our family would probably still have our home to share with our grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Since we don’t, maybe this opportunity would save some other family’s home from the same fate.
George I. Anderson
Millville