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So often in grief, we’re told by people outside our experience what the experience is like for us: what it means, what it feels like, what it should feel like. They take their own experiences, their own guesses about what we’re really wrestling with, and offer their support based on their own internal views. People take our social reactions—or nonreactions—personally, ascribing meaning to them without ever checking out their assumptions.
It's OK That You're Not OK: Meeting Grief and Loss in a Culture That Doesn't Understand
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