Home Set as Homepage Add to Favorite Contact Submit  
             24 November, 2009
 
search for
 
 
 

Categories
Arts & Culture »
Automotive »
Business »
Career »
Communications »
Computers »
Entertainment »
Family Concerns »
Fashion »
Finances »
Food & Drinks »
Health & Fitness »
Hobbies & Crafts »
Home & Garden »
Home Based Business »
Home Management »
Internet »
Kids & Teens »
Legal »
Marketing »
Marriage & Wedding »
Parenting »
Politics & Government »
Real Estate »
Recreation & Sports »
Reference & Education »
Relationships »
Religion & Faith »
Science »
Self Improvement »
Shopping »
Society »
Travel & Leisure »
Womens Interest »
Writing & Speaking »
    
Category:  Articles » Self Improvement » Grief-Loss

 
How to Cope with Murder Grief Popularity:
         Views: 66
2009-04-04 07:57:07     
Article by Maurice Turmel PhD

Murder grief may be somewhat less difficult to deal with than suicide grief, simply because the answer to "why" always points to a third party rather than the deceased individual. Otherwise, the difference is akin to being hit in the head with a 5 pound sledge as opposed to a 10 pound sledge. Either of these will cause a lot of damage. The question of "why", in this case, leads us to try and understand the killer's motivation which rarely delivers a satisfactory answer.

Murder has its own attendant shock response when we first hear about it. The event is sudden, unexpected and horrifying. What only happens on television has now struck home for family survivors. It all seems surreal. In the early stages the news seems unbelievable. How could it happen that someone we love has been killed by another person? For these and other reasons, murder grief presents its own level of difficulties to be overcome.

Like a car accident resulting in death, the reality of murder delivers a powerful blow to surviving loved ones. It knocks us to our knees and leaves us baffled. Who would do such a thing to someone we love? It seems so alien to us that the reality takes some time to settle in. I dealt with several cases of murder in my 25 year career as a therapist. Each of these incidents presented a level of difficulty that no other grief experience could match.

My first case involved a man in his late thirties who came to see me accompanied by his second wife. His first wife, whom he had divorced, and their 2 children, had been murdered by her second husband. The children, a boy and a girl, were 8 and 10 years old at the time. It took a few years of working with this man to finally bring him to a satisfactory level of acceptance and peace.

The second case I encountered involved a woman in her forties whose second husband had been shot to death by a neighbour. In addition to dealing with the murder, she had also learned that her deceased husband had been making advances to the neighbour's wife. This proved to be a double blow for her. Not only did she have to deal with her husband's sudden death, but also with the reality that he had probably been unfaithful.

The third case I want to mention had a more personal relevance to me and my extended family. A first cousin, aged 22 at the time, had been stabbed to death on a local beach. Her assailant had struck while she was sunbathing and likely asleep. At the time of this incident, this perpetrator was out on bail for some other act of violence. This event shook our whole family, especially my aunt and her daughters who were directly impacted. We were all thrust into the reality that a family member had actually been murdered for no reason at all, except being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Losing a loved one to murder is horrific. Accidental death of any kind is much easier to take. The problem with murder is that someone else made the decision to take an innocent life. In our family's case it was a completely random act. The perpetrator was not known to the victim, or vice versa, something he readily admitted during the trial. The shock of losing someone to murder takes hold immediately and leaves family members totally bewildered.

The question of "why" comes up of course, but is directed at the killer rather than the victim, which is the case in suicide. People hope that by understanding the killer's motivation, they can make sense of their loved one's demise. That rarely if ever happens and here's an example.

In case #1 mentioned earlier, the father of those 2 children actually visited the killer in prison in the hopes of getting answers to that very question. He thought a face to face meeting would bring him some closure. Sadly, he came away from the encounter just as confused as ever. Talking to the killer only confirmed what the psychiatry report and my own assessment had already concluded. The killer was a mentally disturbed individual who had descended into paranoia and delusional thinking upon hearing that his wife wanted to leave him. He snapped and became a family annihilator.

There is rarely any satisfaction derived from such meetings. The motives that drive people to murder are simply not understandable to the average person who would never consider such an action. As soon as this is realized and accepted, survivors can move out of shock and into the process of murder grief The same holds true for revenge fantasies and the pursuit of justice and punishment. Although some satisfaction will be derived from a guilty verdict, the need to take care of one's grieving process remains the same. When all is said and done we victims still have to engage in grief recovery.

Maurice Turmel holds a PhD in Counseling Psychology. He was a practicing therapist for nearly 25 years providing counseling and therapy to individuals, groups, organizations and families. He is the author of "The Voice - A Metaphor for Personal Development"; "Mythical Times - Exploring Life, Love & Purpose"; and "How to Cope with Grief and Loss - Support, Guidance and Direction for Your Healing Journey". He has been a guest on numerous National and Regional television and radio talk shows dealing with the subject of Grief and Loss.

Specialized in: Murder Grief - Grieving Murder - Grief After Murder - Grieving A Murder - Murder And Grief - Grieving Murder Of A Loved One - Coping With Grief - Coping With Loss - Death By Murder
URL:
Print article      Send to a friend      Bookmark this page
Related Articles 
Sometimes You Need to Cry (Popularity: ): I recall a period in time, at about 18 months after my husband passed away, that I felt pretty good about myself. I had handled what life had thrown me and come out battered, but mostly okay on the other side. After caretaking my husband for almost a year, I was battling some minor health problems of my own, related mostly to stress, but most days I was certain my ...
Artificial Intelligence - Emulation of Emotion and Empathy (Popularity: ): One of the most important goals for artificial intelligence software programmers is to foster companionship between computers and humans. To do this the AI computers must appear to care and interact like humans do with one another. Emulating emotion and empathy is on its way right now. Currently, most consultants of artificial intelligent customer response systems for 'call centers' advise that the voice on the other end if coming from a ...
Death - The Ultimate Fear (Popularity: ): The ultimate fear we have as human beings is death. We all know it is the inevitable, unavoidable end of our life and yet it is the basis of all our fears. Yet maybe some things in life are worse than our personal death. Losing someone else we love through death may be worse. Being injured and living with pain and disability may be worse. Being publicly exposed to some ...
Widowed Persons And Some Stigma They Suffer (Popularity: ): When I became a widow, I thought I had the grieving thing already whipped. We both knew my husband was dieing and would not be around for long once he was put into the Hospice Program. He had been hospitalized 12 different times during his 8 years on oxygen. His lung disease, diabetes and heart disease all had an equal chance of taking him away. We had talks about how ...
Gerald Ford and James Brown: We Hardly Knew Ye (Popularity: ): I find it fascinating that our nation is mourning two famous individuals whom hardly anybody knew. People all across America are talking about President Ford and James Brown in glowing and endearing terms, almost as if the two of them had been our next-door neighbors. Only they weren’t, but it doesn’t seem to matter. We mourn their deaths because both of them were important to us as a nation. President ...


Related Business 
Letting Go of Your Grief (Popularity: ): An article about techniques to try to help cope with grief. By Bobbi Gay.
Coping With The 5 Stages of Grief and Bereavement (Popularity: ): How to cope with grief and bereavement. What the 5 stages of grief and bereavment are. Coping with loss.
Hamilton's Funeral Home (Popularity: ): In Des Moines Iowa, including services offered, prices, a FAQ, preplanning and our uniques Academy of Grief and Loss which offers grief information and resources, grief-related education, and grief recovery services for all ages.
Kids Cope with Grief (Popularity: ): Offers a "Memory Kit" as a resource for children to help them through the grieving process.
CRUSE (Popularity: ): UK national bereavement charity. Information on grief and bereavement, suggestions on how to cope, contact and support details.
Grief Inc. (Popularity: ): Official home of Darcie, Tony and Alicia Sims, who are internationally recognized public speakers on the topics of grief and grief support.
Language of Loss (Popularity: ): Offers services and resources including grief seminars, support groups, individual counseling, workshops, and grief education. List of grief resources.
Healing Grief (Popularity: ): Spiritual resources for people in grief. Invitations to contribute stories about after-death communication, miracles, inspirations, mystical photos. Includes a healing journey, bookstore, tapes, consultations, created by a widow to share with other people in grief.
Pet Loss and Grief Support at IMOM (Popularity: ): Non-profit group offering understanding and emotional support. Email list for pet loss and grief support, personal tributes to bridge pets, support forum, and grief counseling by email from a licensed counselor.
Grief on Medbroadcast.com (Popularity: ): Tips on coping with death and grief. Health ways to grieve.


 
 
Home | Top | Set as Homepage | Bookmark this Page | Privacy | Contact | Submit Article
© 2003-2008 ABC Directory. All Rights Reserved