We are LCMS Christian Coaches who seek to encourage the body of Christ in the use, growth, and spread of coaching, so that people may live out their calling in Christ.

We are LCMS Christian Coaches who seek to encourage the body of Christ in the use, growth, and spread of coaching, so that people may live out their calling in Christ.

With this blog post we welcome LCMS Coaching Network member, and grief coach Julie Lynn Ashley who has authored this insightful piece. We trust it will bless many personally or as you coach others. SG.

As a grief coach by vocation, a sigh of relief I see in my clients is when I dismantle the idea of orderly stages of grief, which are now considered academically and experientially out of date. 

Anyone who has been through a significant loss will tell you that while each person grieves uniquely, it is possible to feel a lot of these “stages of grief” all within the same hour…and certainly not in any particular order. Grieving people will tell you that just when they thought they had gained a little ground, a scent, a song, or seeing something at the grocery store can metaphorically “pull the rug out” from under them. Grief is not orderly; it is actually quite messy.   

All of this mirrors the “out of order” life event and the deep ache of burying a child, grieving not only all that was lost up to that point of death… but all that was to be in the future.  These thoughts and feelings all tumble around together in the mind and heart like clothes tumbling in a dryer… in anything but an orderly fashion. 

Instead of orderly stages, the concept I introduce with my clients is that of the “Dual Process Model of Grieving” (Strobe & Schut, 1999).

If you look carefully at this model…there is a side that focuses on the loss and a side that focuses on moving forward.  The zig-zag lines in between these two models represent how a grieving person zings back and forth between these…sometimes in the same day or the same hour.  

If you are grieving, I hope this will bring any small degree of comfort that grief generally does not manifest itself in orderly sequential lines.  If you are trying to support a grieving person, I hope this will open your eyes to the fact that this model will go on for a lifetime…not 1 calendar year. Approach a grieving person with a humble respect that you truly cannot understand the deep nature of what they are going through and what they have lost, but with a strong desire to walk alongside and support where you can. 

Julie Lynn holds a Masters of Science in Thanatology (death, grief and bereavement), is a member of the Association for Death Education and Counseling, mom to Landon and Kyle (both in college) and wife to her very best friend of 27 years, Doug, a lead pastor in Texas. Julie Lynn has worked and volunteered in the hospice industry for years developing a God-given passion to support grieving people. She has a grief support ministry (in-person and online) working with people one-on-one who need support following a death loss. Find Julie Lynn at www.julielynnashley.com and get her free grief support resource list.

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