Will I get my job back? Will I be able to see my aging parents?
Anxiety can range from mild to crippling and whatever was going on in our lives beforehand got worse with Covid-19.
Audio sessions for coping with grief.
The Covid-19 Pandemic has been grief-inducing world-wide and may continue to cause grief for years to come.
Although we’ve generally associated grief with the loss of a loved one, the pandemic reveals many of the same personal and universal challenges to us both individually and collectively.
Will I get my job back? Will I be able to see my aging parents?
Anxiety can range from mild to crippling and whatever was going on in our lives beforehand got worse with Covid-19.
As medical science reduced most forms of early death, talk of death gradually became taboo.
Covid-19, at the very least, has caused a more realistic approach to discussing the subject of death.
Research tells us that we must learn to accept losing a loved one in order to regain happiness.
Does the same apply to accepting Covid-19?
Grief inducing tragedies teach us life lessons and those lessons often make us more compassionate. Covid-19 also tells us a lot about compassion as well as it’s less altruistic reactions.