What is Picking Up The Pieces?
Picking
Up The Pieces is a community service program consisting of videotapes,
pamphlets and books.. .free for you to give to the community free
of charge.
We are pleased to offer Picking
Up The Pieces, an outreach program designed to help people in
our community cope with the complex emotions and feelings of grief
after experiencing or anticipating the death of a loved one.
As professional funeral directors,
our years of experience in assisting families pointed out the need
for information and guidance to help people deal with death. As
a result, our company developed the Picking Up The Pieces program...
a sensitive collection of videotapes, pamphlets, and books that
are free of charge to anyone in the community who can benefit from
this information.
The videotapes feature personal
interviews with individuals who have experienced a death and who
offer encouragement, advice, and insight for dealing with grief.
The accompanying pamphlets and
books are written by respected educators and authors who are recognized
experts in the field of bereavement.
Each Picking Up The Pieces program
consists of sensitive materials and activities dealing with a particular
topic with which people may find difficult to cope. Programs include:
All of the videotapes and booklets
are available in English. and many are also available in Spanish
and French.

When
someone you love dies, the grieving process is unique and very personal.
Concerned friends can offer empathy and support, but unless they
have experienced a similar loss, they cannot fully know and understand
the pain and anguish.
“Working Through Your Grief"
is a videotape that features support group members talking about
their feelings after the death of a loved one. The accompanying
booklet is written from the perspective of a concerned friend helping
someone come to terms with a painful experience.
Both the videotape and booklet are
designed to be viewed or read in one sitting. They also serve as
a resource that individuals can turn to often for encouragement
and support as they heal. Viewers of the videotape will identify
with the range of emotions and feelings displayed by the support
group and take great comfort in the fact that they are not the only
ones going through this difficult time.
The underlying message in “Working Through Your
Grief" is that grief is a highly individual process and
people must follow their own “internal wisdom” in learning to live
with the death of someone they love.
Do
you know what to say to your child when a close friend or relative
dies? Are you even sure if your child fully understands the concept
of death?
It is often difficult for adults to know what is going through
the mind of a child and what words will comfort and reassure him
or her. “A Child’s View of Grief" allows adults to enter
into the child’s world — giving the adult a new perspective through
a booklet and videotape that includes interviews with children of
various ages. The program deals with the important issue of the
adult respecting the child’s grieving process, even though it may
be complex or inarticulate.
For example, a child may respond to the news of a death of a loved
one by immediately going out and playing in the yard. This protective
mechanism is often the first stage of the child’s grieving process.
Thus, adults should not react by scolding the child for failing
to show emotion, rather they should watch for signs that the child
is ready to talk about the death.
Adults will also gain insight on how they can assist
bereaved teenagers. The adolescent years are particularly complicated,
so death is not the only issue teenagers have to face. Caregivers
are cautioned not to allow the youngster to “postpone” his grief,
which can result in more intense problems later in life.
One
of your best students tragically lost her father in an automobile
accident. Before her father’s death, she got along well with her
classmates and was eager to learn. After the death, she has become
angry and hostile to her fellow students and has shown no interest
in doing schoolwork. How do you respond?
“Helping Children Cope With Grief,
A Teacher’s Guide” answers this question along with many others.
This pamphlet serves as a guide for educators who want to help their
students develop healthy, intellectual and emotional responses to
the inevitability of death.
The pamphlet emphasize the teacher’s
role as a model of behavior for children and encourage teachers
to talk openly and honestly about their own grief experiences. By
doing so, students realize that even adults must experience and
cope with uncomfortable emotions.
Teachers receive useful guidelines
for answering children’s often blunt or insensitive questions about
death. Students may often ask the same question many times in order
to reopen the conversation and to receive a more detailed response.
Sometimes the best approach for a teacher to take is to simply listen.
Coping
with the death of a loved one is difficult for anyone to experience.
However, when someone you are close to is suffering from a terminal
illness, the circumstances are often even more trying.
“Someone You Love Is Dying. How
Do You Cope?” deals with the phenomenon known as anticipatory
grief. The videotape and booklet reveal that the pain is more than
the realization that a loved one is about to die. The anguish can
also be caused by the slow deterioration of the loved one’s physical
capabilities as well as the loss of social and everyday activities.
Included in the videotape are interviews
with those who have been through this traumatic experience. They
offer practical advice such as knowing when to ask a friend or relative
for a few hours of respite, and how to respond to the changing needs
of the dying person.
These materials provide the framework
of knowledge and support you need to shape your loved one’s remaining
time into a lasting memory of love and comfort. The booklet encourages
you to express your feelings to this person by saying, “Thank you,”
1 love you,” and “Good-bye.”
"If
I looked at my watch and it said 3 o’clock, I’d have to look out
a window to see if it was daytime or nighttime. I didn’t feel hunger
until somewhere in May of the year after...” Those are the words
of a surviving wife, describeing the disorientation and numbness
she experienced when her husband was murdered by the terrorist attack
on Pan Am Flight 103 in December 1988.
This story is representative of
the personal profiles that form Living With Grief After Sudden Loss,”
a videotape and book that serves as a guide for those who have lost
a loved one through suicide, homicide, accident, heart attack or
stroke.
The videotape is a montage of comments
and reactions from survivors of sudden loss. Their comments are
arranged to take the viewer through the wide range of emotions the
survivor had immediately after the loss to the present time. The
survivors recount their stories with information of things that
helped them the most during their period of grief.
The personal stories in the book
are accompanied by commentaries by mental health experts, detailing
the complexities of bereavement through unexpected, sometimes violent
loss. The sheer circumstances of the sudden death can produce additional
trauma that the survivor must deal with in addition to the grieving
process.
For additional complimentary copies
of any of the Picking Up The Pieces videotapes or books, please
call. |