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by Stella

Going With The Flow

August 29, 2010 in Acceptance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Uncategorized

One of the things I came to realize after losing my 20 year old son was that so much of our energies are used up and so much of our small joys are missed because we resist what is.  Our child has been unfairly and unjustly taken away  from us and in the blink of an eye our life has changed forever and we do not want that to be.   So we resist with our hearts, our minds, all of our being and find it uses up the majority of our life’s focus and energy and to what avail it changes nothing except our moments of joy, which go now unnoticed and our life-force which is mostly drained and leaves us feeling as if we are on autopilot.   A mere shell of who we were.  I read once that we as parents soon after the loss of our child operate at 85% less of our previous abilities.  I would believe it! 

What I later learned though is we have a choice in how we will respond to our loss.  Going with the flow means not resisting the direction the flow is taking you whether you are there by choice or not.  It does not mean we choose it nor that we like it but that we are open to the direction we are being taken and learn to  trust that the powers that be or place life is taking us will be OK.  It is like being small again and having our lives directed by adults who are there for us.  Some of these things work and some don’t work for our individual and unique personalities.  But still we live our young lives, and are happy and prosper.  This is the attitude Buddha may have meant when he said “It is what it is.” Sometimes things truly are just what they are and the answer to how to cope with that is to simply ride it out and believe things will be ok again, different without your child, but there will be joys again, and beauty, and love and all the things that make life wonderful and worthwhile. 

 Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

 

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by Stella

Steps To Peace After The Heartbreak Of Child-loss

August 19, 2010 in Career Coaching, Grief, Healing, Uncategorized

Losing my own son and moving through the initial grief to where I was ready to move forward again  I learned that in Grief  coaching there are steps one takes which once they have been completed, move a grieving parent from pain to peace.  Although none of us will certainly ever forget our child and more than likely we will always have grief-bursts from time to time,  we can learn how to better integrate our loss easier and quicker  with the guidance and support of a professional grief recovery coach.   Then we will find we can again move forward in our lives and be happy.

 In the 12 step method I use coaching parents from the pain of child-loss to happiness again, there are two steps that have to do with writing.  One is called the Letter of Apology and Appreciation and is designed to create a mind shift to move you from any negative feelings you have about or surrounding your child’s death to feelings of positivity. 

The other step is a powerful path to peace and is simply called A Relationship Review For Peace.  Understand that when a relationship ends even when it is because your child died it is important to realize a number of things.  First that only the physical aspects of your relationship have come to an end.  Although very difficult to go through it helps to understand that we as parents still and always will have the other two parts of our relationship with our child and that is the spiritual connection and emotional connection we have had since they were born.  Understanding these two other important facets of our continued connection with our children then explains why these two writing steps work so well at helping move us forward towards peace.

 In doing the Relationship Review For Peace letter we learn that it is quite normal when a relationship ends to have your mind go crazy, you find yourself reviewing, analyzing, yearning, condemning, wishing etc. over and over again.  It’s like an empty spot in your mouth where a tooth recently was we just keep digging and digging into the raw spot looking for the tooth and finding how tender the area is!    We as grieving parents find that as we continue reviewing the relationship with our child, instead of moving forward as we wish, instead it’s as if our wheels have become stuck in the sand.  The more we try to drive out the more stuck we seem to get. 

Although it’s normal and natural to review a relationship which has ended with one’s child, we have to know how to do it or we just dig ourselves  in deeper emotionally.  Done properly this step works to bring back freedom, peace and happiness. 

Some of the questions I use with these two writing steps to help a parent powerfully connect with their child after they have died are:

•What experiences have I been through since my loved one’s death?

•What do I miss?

•What do I regret?

•What issues in our relationship remain unresolved?

•What do I appreciate?

•What have I learned about myself, my loved one, and my relationship?

•What do I want to carry on?

Ask yourself the following questions after you have written your letter:

•Was I open and honest?

•Did I express my love and appreciation?

•Did I address unresolved issues in our relationship?

•Do I still feel regrets?

•Are any resentments still bothering me?

•Is anything left unsaid?

•Do I feel forgiveness? Do I feel more understanding?

I invite you to use these steps to  work through your own loss or to share this with someone you know who has experienced the pain of child-loss.    A certified grief recovery coach can more quickly and easily lead you through both these steps, The Letter of Apology and Appreciation and The Relationship Review for Peace along with 10 other steps which have been used by myself as well as countless other grieving parents  to heal the past and open your heart to happiness again.

 Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

How Do I Help A Grieving Parent?

August 13, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Fearless, Grief, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Purpose, Relationships, Spiritual Connection, success, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

 ”What can I do to help someone who has lost a child?  I get asked this quite often and although I have previously written some about it in my other blogs there are some additional things I would like to add.  In my own experience  many of my friends and family were great support, there were others however who either shied away from me as they did not know what to do or were worried they might say the wrong thing.   Some were hit and miss, they were often one time helpful and another not.  The following are some things you can do to better support a grieving parent:

Acknowledge that your friends child has died and the impact this has had on your friend.  Show interest in your friends feelings and worries.  Realize you cannot and do not need to make them feel better.  It is okay and healthy for either or both of you to cry.  Listen when your friend wants to talk and keep it confidential.  Try not to give too much advice because you feel helpless.  Your friend has all the answers and your job is to listen, reflect back and help them to find those answers from within themselves.

Admit you don’t know what to do for your friend.  Let your friend know you feel inadequate to help and do not know what to do and take their direction if you can.  If you feel overwhelmed by the intensity of it let your friend know why you need to take a break from it for awhile.

Learn what it is your grieving friend is experiencing. Read up on grief on the internet, check into books on grieving, talk with others that have dealt with grieving parents.  Understand that your friend may be tired, irritable, edgy, forgetful and have trouble focusing due to anxiety, stress and grief.  Realize that grief takes time and your friend is learning a new normal for him or herself.  You may sometimes see that your friend needs you and other times they may want to be alone.  Sometimes they will want to talk and other times be silent with you.

Help as and when you can- and realize small things help a lot too.  Meals, breads, cookies, errand running, phone calls, offers to take other kids for a bit and cards and notes all help.

Try and take things with a grain of salt.  Many grieving parents have not the energy  to be considerate or nice so try not to take words or actions by them  personally.

Grief changes a person and although some friendships deepen some drift apart.  Try and be open and accepting of change and grieve if you must the loss of the old friendship.

 Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

 Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Healing a Loss at a Time

July 30, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Love, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

Interesting how each loss prepares you for the next.  Surviving the loss of my son after he had been missing for almost two years was certainly the most devastating event in my life.   And I have reflected back on the fact that each  of my previous loss experiences  both big and small helped me to handle something like losing a child.    How remarkable that the very things I learned to handle that loss I am  again using with new losses I have found myself up against.

I, my siblings and friends are at that time in our lives when either we have lost parents and or have aging parents that we realize  will not  be there for us one day.  We find our children are growing up and are leaving home and we find ourselves mourning that connection when they were part of our daily lives.  We are experiencing retirement or career changes and the losses associated with that.   Some of my friends have life altering or life threatening illnesses, even the world we once knew is becoming a scarier place to be in and makes us feel sad at the loss of olden days and simpler times.  Each of these things once again forces me to let go of the very false perception we have that we have control of our lives. In an instant the rug can be pulled out from under us, the course of our lives forever changed and leave us ungrounded and devastated.

 What I have come to understand is that while the tide in our lives is the constant, what the tide brings each time is ever changing and seeing the beauty in this natural rhythm of things is profound.

 A fact of life is we will experience many losses and in our lifetimes we live by losing, leaving and letting go. These are simply a part of our ever changing world like the seasons.  We nor those we love can escape this sorrow that is part of life.  Parents die, friends drift away and our children grow up and leave home. We lose spouses and partners to divorce or death; sometimes we lose them emotionally long before.

 With each major loss, we often encounter multiple losses. For example, the death of a parent can lead to many other losses– of our identity as their child, of our family history, and sometimes of friends as they retreat from the intensity of our grief. Losing a job can lead to the loss of self-confidence, identity, and power. A miscarriage or infertility can bring about the loss of the dream of having a family. A divorce can result in the loss of a lifestyle, home, friends, and identity.

   Our culture is one of acquisition and in it we are not taught how to handle loss.  We often think that we can avoid the pain of loss if we keep busy, that we can wall off our hearts a little to protect ourselves. However it is the un-grieved losses that snowball and eventually take their toll on our hearts and deaden us. We do not realize that even these, as hard as they are, are connected to our personal growth.

 Irish poet John O’ Donohue writes that loss is the “sister of discovery”.   He explains that as it empties and clears away the old, loss makes room for something new.  It allows us to grow and enjoy new things. Loss provides a “vital clearance of the soul”.  It prunes away the dead branches so that new shoots can break forth.

  When we are able to open our hearts and ourselves to the many smaller losses in our lives and treat them as teachings for the more major losses for which life will bring us, we are not so overwhelmed when a major loss such as the death of a child happens.  Instead we are able to tap into that reservoir of loss we hold within us and not only survive it but grow from it.

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

                                                                                   Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Finding The Path Through The Bewildering Experience Of Loss

July 23, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Career Coaching, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Grounding, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Perception, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

Parents who lose a child are often left feeling as if they have survived a catastrophe and are left standing at  ground zero with no clue as to where to go or how to begin getting their life back.  It is difficult to know what to do from where they are at and on top of it they are left feeling stunned and reeling from the intense feelings of loss and pain.  Our society I have found offers little help in this area and the things people tell us such as time heals all wounds and he’s in a better place anger, frustrate, and stir up  the anxiety and confusion we already feel.  What I was fortunate enough to have found is that there are tools we  can use that make a huge difference in how quickly and easily we are able to merge our lives before we lost our child with the life we have now without that child.  Although forever changed  we can learn to adjust and be happy again.   We can each use our own creative and intuitive abilities fine tuned to us to help us find the peace we need.  We just need to be taught how and my experience was that with a grief recovery coach I was able to learn not only what these tools are but was coached on how to use them.    Some of the help I found came from a book I read called:  The Infinite Thread: Healing Relationships Beyond Loss by Alexandra Kennedy.  In it she mentions 7 steps for the process of recovery.

 They are:

  • to express all the feelings over this loss: anguish, longing, relief, anger, depression, numbness, despair, aching, guilt, confusion, and often unbearable pain
  • to let the nonnegotiable and excruciating reality sink in that you will never again be in the physical presence of your deceased loved one
  • to review your relationship from the beginning and to see the positive and negative aspects of the person and the relationship
  • to identify and heal your unresolved issues and your regrets
  • to explore the changes in your family and other relationships
  • to integrate all the changes into a new sense of yourself and to take on healthy new ways of being in the world without this person
  • to form a healthy new inner relationship with this person and to find new ways of relating to him or her.

Kennedys book reinforced how it’s important to actively work to integrate and resolve our grief, not to just passively experience our reactions to it.  She states that, “Grief carries us until we learn to carry it.” Reading that phrase helped me understand that we do not need to stay victims of grief we can be survivors and even captains of our destiny again if we wish!

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Learning To Cope With Pain After Child Loss

July 9, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Grief, Grounding, Healing, Knowledge, Love, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEWhen I was learning how to navigate the world and my new life after I lost my son, I read an article that helped me tremendously.  So much in fact I decided to base this blog on it!  The following is from Richard Marsh’s biography “Surviving Loss”:

 Coping and Catastrophic Change

  By  nature,  everyone  has multiple ways to  cope  with  any  problem.  While everyone has heard of the “Flight or Fight” alternatives, there are actually about nine methods of coping used  by people,  each  with a typical type of action  and  an  associated mental state.

  1.   Attack.  When faced with a problem, one may attack  it. 

 The action for this pattern is fighting and the emotion is anger. 

 Anyone who reacts to challenge and problems with anger is focused

 on this pattern of resolving conflicts and problems.

 

 2.   Fleeing.   When faced with a problem, a person can  run

 away  from it.  The action is flight, and the emotional state  is

 fear.  Many people run from their problems.

 

 3.   Denial.   The action is to ignore the problem  and  the

 emotional state is dullness.

 

4.   Dithering.   The  action associated with  dithering  is

 random response and the emotional state is confusion.   Dithering

 is also referred to in the literature as distracting.

 

 5.   Co-option.  The action associated with co-opting problems

 is  cooperation.  The general act is trying  to  reach  a

 participatory and collective action and the emotional state  is

 a cooperative one.

 

 6.   Analysis.   This response to stress or problems is to

 attempt to think through and understand the problem. 

The emotional state is usually curiosity.

 

  7.   Action.   This response is somewhat of the opposite  to

 Analysis.  It is “doing something, anything” and in many ways  is

 an  active  form  of dithering.  The emotional state  is  one  of

 extreme intentness.

 

 8.   Appeasement.   The general act is to just give  in  and

 the general emotional state is guilt.

 

 9.   Anguish.  This response is to give up and the emotional

 state is one of despair. 

 

      Whenever  there  is catastrophic change and pain,  the  mind treats  the pain as a signal that the current methods  of  coping need  to be changed.  The subconscious treats the pain  as  proof that  the current method has failed and forces a person to  begin to  try the methods over and over again until the pain  decreases and something is found that “works.”

  Persons  who have catastrophic loss will experience  all  of the above states and methods over and over again in their  lives, almost randomly, until the pain decreases.

  Thus,  if  a person were assaulted and robbed in  a  parking lot,  they would feel anger, confusion, guilt and a desire to  do something  (or  nothing) over and over again until the  pain  had healed.   The emotions and states would be applied to  everything in life, not just parking lots and banks.

  A  person who loses a child will suffer through  this  cycle for at least a year and usually for three to five years.  If they are  moved off track in their healing they can become stuck in  a mode for five to ten years or even for life.  One of the  worst things  outsiders  can  do is pressure grieving  parents  not  to resolve a mode or to attempt to force them to stick in one.

 Steps and Cycles

  It  is important to understand that these  steps  associated with grief and mourning can afflict everyone, not just those with ”serious” losses.  While these steps are caused by the constant cycling of coping mechanisms, these steps occur, to some  extent, in  every life when loss occurs.  While few lose  children,  many lose  jobs, friends and other hopes, and experience  portions  of the same steps.

 In  spite  of  it all, it is possible to  cope.   You,  your family  and others can all do things that will help you  make  it through the loss of a child (or other significant loss) in  shape to make a better tomorrow and able to care for those who  remain.  Always  remember, those who remain need you as much as those  who died.

 While I had read about the stages of grief written many years ago by the famous Dr. Kubler- Ross, and was able to apply them to my own healing.   I found that the 9 stages of coping with catastrophe found above carried me even further up the road to grief recovery.  I hope that in reading this many others find the help they need as well.    

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

Child Loss Can Be Incapacitating

July 1, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, success, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLELosing a child can be and most often is incapacitating to varying degrees depending on the individual.  The definition of incapacity according to the Encarta Dictionary is: “A physical or mental challenge, making learning or performing basic tasks difficult.”

 In Learning About Grief from Normal Families:  SIDS, Still-birth, and Miscarriage, Journal of Marital and  Family  Therapy, 1991,  Vol. 17, No. 3, 215 it says, “the period of substantial incapacity normally lasts one to three years when a child dies, nine to fifteen months for a miscarriage.”

 Because  such a large part of incapacity is the loss of mental function, parents who have lost a child often are unable to properly measure the depth or level of their incapacity.  Many parents report that immediately following their loss, they lost the ability to stand, talk and think at the same time.   The mental effort required to keep their balance took more than they had.  At the time this was happening they were unaware of this incapacity they were suffering from and not until they looked back did they come to realize how impaired they had been.  What is important here is to understand that this is a quite normal and common response to child loss. 

 For caregivers, during the time right after child loss, understanding this concept should help in what areas you might step into to help the grieving parent.  Things such as driving, cooking, caring for other children in the home, errands etc.  Having been there myself as a grieving parent an excellent approach would have been “let me come be your friend/servant for the day so you don’t have to be worrying about menial things like driving or cooking so soon after your loss.”  Specifically suggesting rather than  generally asking “where can I help?”  Always the independent one when I was asked about where I needed help I resisted but later found myself in dangerous situations like going through red lights and leaving pans burning on the stove.  Thank heavens my guardian angel was obviously on overtime duty during the weeks following when my son was reported missing and again when his murdered remains were found.

 ”Unfortunately, in addition to reduced mental function greater financial obligations usually accompany loss” according to research from Counseling  Bereaved Families (Springer Publishing Company, Inc.) at 75-77. Thus the demands on your ability increase as your ability decreases.  Most parents report that due to medical bills, funeral bills and or inability to work they feel the stress of decreased income after child loss.  This in turn also causes additional stress and therefore has an even further incapacitating effect.

 Again the important thing here is that as a grieving parent one realizes that this is a normal and universal reaction to losing a child and that there is light at the end of the proverbial tunnel once an individual has done enough grief recovery work for themselves.  As I have mentioned before this can be done on one’s own but is most often faster and easier when done with a Professional Grief Recovery Coach like I and many other parents have or a Therapist.

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

                                                                  Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

How Many Children Do You Have?

June 11, 2010 in Acceptance, Balance, Communication, Compassion, Grief, Grounding, Healing, Intuition, Knowledge, Love, Motivation, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Relationships, Thought, Uncategorized, Understanding, Wisdom

 ME 2 SEATTLESoon after my son’s murdered remains were found I was filling out a form and came to the question, “How many children do you have?”  I remember feeling panic  at that moment at how to answer this question I had previously answered easily for over twenty years.  Logic said three girls but my heart thought no, that is not right, that seems  like denying my sons existence.  Next I thought,  I have three girls and one son, four kids, no, that isn’t right either, is it?

Losing a child was bad enough and now staring me square in the face was this awful question that I now realized I was going to have to deal with not only once but numerous times I knew for the rest of my life.  So I figured I might as well find the right answer for me for all those form questions and those individuals I would surely come across who would ask me as well.

In the beginning when I needed to tell my story of my son and how he had died I spoke in detail of how he had gone missing for almost two years and how and where his remains had been found as well as how his case was being pursued by numerous private, state, and federal agencies. 

As the months began to pass and I found I had told my story enough and the grieving process had begun to heal me I found I did not need to go into the details any more.  My needs had changed and so I rethought my answer.

Now I answer five stepchildren, three daughters and one angel son.  I consider who is asking and why and whether or not they are going to be a continuing part of my life to determine if I am going to go any further in my answer.  If so I tell them more so as not to feel as if we are dancing around the fact at hand of my son’s death.  I may also explain that my husband’s first born daughter also died of spinal meningitis when she was two, many years before I met my husband.   Better out in the open I figure, as it than loses its ability to interfere with the relationship.

If on the other hand the individual is just a passerby in my life than I  leave it at five stepchildren, three daughters and one angel son and seldom does anyone pursue it beyond that.   If they do or if they have follow up questions about my children I tell them that my 20 year old son went missing for almost two years and his remains were found at that point and the authorities are all in agreement of who did it and know who did it but it is still an ongoing investigation and they are waiting to make an arrest.  Then I tell them about my  stepchildren and daughters who are alive and well. This way I give them a chance to either acknowledge my son’s death and continue asking questions or ask about the rest of our kids.  Doing it this way usually keeps everyone, including me comfortable. 

 The occasional embarrassed individual I feel bad for but I see it as their problem.   Everyone is different when it comes to this question and no answer is a wrong one in fact my husband who lost a daughter in his first marriage along with his stepson (my son) answers seven children.  For him this is what works.   

Each of us has to decide what is right for us and then  simply say it.  In this way we strip the question of its ability to traumatize us, we take away it’s negative power and  it can no longer have a harmful affect on us.

Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

                                                                                   Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

June 4, 2010 in Grief, Knowledge, Motivation, Purpose, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Thought

ME 2 SEATTLE13 Things To Know If Your Child Goes Missing

Many parents I have come across have asked me to include a blog dealing with what I and other parents learned while dealing with the unimaginable happening, having your child go missing.   Below is a compilation of things I found to do when my son of 20 years went missing for almost two years.  We did find him.  Not the ending we were hoping for but we did at least find him!

  1. Immediately call (911) and all other local law enforcement agencies: Do not stop after you have called 911. Depending on your circumstances, contact your local Police Department, County Sheriff, State Police or Highway Patrol, law enforcement in surrounding jurisdictions and the Border Patrol if applicable. Remember, there is no 24 or 48-hour waiting period. If you meet resistance demand to speak to the watch commander and insist that they take a report and enter the information into the National Crime Information Computer (NCIC) at once.
  2. Notify the Federal Bureau of Investigation: If you suspect a predatory abduction. The FBI will initiate a kidnapping investigation involving a missing child of tender years, defined as a child twelve years or younger, even though there is no known interstate aspect. The FBI will monitor other kidnapping situations when there is no evidence of interstate travel, and it offers assistance from various entities including the FBI Laboratory. They have written protocols, dedicated agents, unsurpassed resources and vast experience in this specialized investigative field.
  3. Log onto or refer the responding law enforcement agency to www.beyondmissing.com: This revolutionary Website allows registered law enforcement agencies to immediately create and distribute missing flyers to other targeted law enforcement agencies using powerful Internet tools. Parents can also create, download and print flyers for duplication, but not database or electronically distribute missing flyers. There is no cost for either service.
  4. 4.      Find registered offenders.  Are there any close to your home?  www.familywatchdog.us
  5. Notify all local media assignment desks: The sooner television and radio begin notifying the community that a child has been kidnapped, the better the chances of recovery. It’s as simple as that.
  6. Notify your local non-profit Child Locator Service: They can provide an array of services pertinent to your situation. Child Locator Services exist to assist in the recovery of missing children. Do not overlook this important resource.
  7. If you believe that your child has been kidnapped: Contact the National Center For Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST.
  8. If you believe that your child has been kidnapped: Contact Team H.O.P.E., a parent support network for families with missing children. Team H.O.P.E. volunteer parents have experienced the agony of searching for their own children. They provide practical and emotional support for parents whose children are victims of predatory kidnapping, parental abduction, international abduction, adult missing and runaways and can be reached at 1-800-306-6311.

9.  Sign up for wireless amber alert. The AMBER AlertTM Program is a voluntary partnership between law-enforcement agencies, broadcasters, transportation agencies, and the wireless industry, to activate an urgent bulletin in the most serious child-abduction cases. The goal of an AMBER Alert is to instantly galvanize the entire community to assist in the search for and the safe recovery of the child.   www.wirelessamberalerts.org

10.  If you believe that your child has run away: Contact the National Runaway Switchboard www.1800runaway.org at 1-800-786 2929.

11.  Keep your home phone attended by someone your child knows: Install Caller ID if you do not already have that service and record conversations. This may be the only way your child knows how to reach you.

12.  Take care to preserve your physical and emotional welfare: Friends, neighbors and even total strangers will be working toward a successful resolution, but you must remember to eat and sleep regularly. This will be the most daunting and difficult journey that you will ever take and you will need sobriety, presence of mind and good judgment if it is to be successful. Seek emotional and psychological support from your church, a social service agency or even a professional counselor or Grief Coach with experience in your type of situation. Remember that you alone are leading the battle for the return of your missing child.

13.  Remember – Never Give Up Hope! As long as you believe, hope remains eternal.

Additional sites I used and recommend are:

www.ncmec.org
www.amw.com
www.missingchildrencenterinc.com
www.missingkids.com
www.childquest.org- preventive etc 

www.Klasskids.org 

Some of the information here is from these websites.

Additional resources can be found at www.parentsgriefrecovery.com

    Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson

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by Stella

What Grieving Parents Want Professionals To Know

May 27, 2010 in Acceptance, Compassion, Grief, Healing, Knowledge, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing, Spiritual Connection, Thought, Understanding, Wisdom

ME 2 SEATTLEApril 29th, 2007-Today the police called and asked my husband Mike and I to come down again to the station and meet with Joshes dad and step mom for the umpteenth time. Little do I know that the rug will be pulled out from under me severely and quickly without any warning as it was 2 years ago when I was told that my 20 year old son Josh had gone missing. 

Upon arriving at the police conference room they told us that  my son had been found.  A moment of pure joy that was followed by the next comment b y the police,” his remains were found yesterday afternoon by some individuals in a remote area several hours away from Lewistown.  The area has been cordoned off and evidence is being collected.   

It takes all my strength and concentration to simply remain where I am under the continued assault of information.  Josh my son is dead.  I ask if they know what has happened and they say yes he has been killed and an investigation will follow.

These memories of that fateful day when I found out my son had been murdered will remain with me forever.  In my work with Grieving Parents I was surprised to find how many of them had similar stories and each of us talked of how we wished professionals were more adequately prepared for how to work with parents who have just gotten the news their child has died.  Below are some things that grieving parents would like to see professionals know: 

 Looking For Significance-What we are looking for in the midst of a trauma is significance. We need to know that our relationship to the patient is acknowledged and that we don’t have to relinquish our family position just because our loved one is in the hospital or has died.

           

 Need to be Informed-Obviously, it will not always be possible or even wise for family members to be with a patient during all life-saving procedures. However, we need to be kept informed. A liaison should be assigned to the family, someone who can explain what’s happening, someone who will represent the doctor and the family well. A liaison can also offer to call a pastor, chaplain, or friend. A liaison should also help provide privacy for the family, and most of all they need to be gentle. We have just been severely traumatized, our child has died or is dying, we are in a strange environment, and we are frightened. We need someone who will establish good rapport and establish our significance

 

Answer Our Questions-We will have all kinds of questions. “Is he conscious? Is he in pain? What happened? What are the medical people doing right now? Why is it taking so long? Will he live?”

 We need someone to explain  hospital procedures and answer  questions. A caring staff person who is well informed can go a long way toward preventing malpractice suits and most certainly promote goodwill between the hospital, the doctor, and the patient’s family. 

Parents are often so frustrated by the lack of answers by medical personnel that they feel a malpractice suit is often the only way to force an explanation of what happened and get answers to their questions.

 I have learned that families can handle an “I don’t know” or “I did everything I could” answer much more easily than a medical person’s refusal to answer or a medical person’s apparent avoidance of the family. When our questions aren’t answered by medical personnel, we are left to come up with our own answers and they may well be wrong.

           

 

Do Not Avoid Us-As medical professionals please do not be evasive because you are afraid of us and our questions.    Instead gather information and inform  when we ask.   Be aware of volunteers from bereavement support groups who can be called to talk with and/or sit with a family facing the death of a loved one.

 Do Not be Afraid to Show Sympathy- for fear we may “fall apart.  When we cry or show some other emotion, we are not doing so because you showed concern. We are doing so because someone has finally given significance to us and our situation and we feel it is safe to express our true feelings.

 

Allow us to Vent-It is helpful if someone shows enough concern that we know it is safe to express our feelings and our fears. Once we know it is ok to express our true feelings, the strong emotions usually dissipate quite quickly. However, when we sense it is not safe to show our emotions, we generally do everything we can to hold them in until some often insignificant situation arises and the top explodes off of our emotions like an exploding volcano.

 

Provide a Liaison-If a hospital can provide a caring person to stick with the family and even call and check up on them later, that will go a long way to create good will and positive attitudes between the family and the medical establishment.

           

 Educate Yourself- It is important that medical personnel become well versed in how to help families when things don’t go the way they had hoped. Don’t just read clinical material on bereavement; read articles and books written by bereaved people.

 

Don’t Let Us Leave Empty Handed – Gather information for us on support groups. Prepare a resource list of helpful books and articles. Hand it to us. Give us a card with the telephone number of a minister, grief recovery coach or counselor. Send us home with some books that will address our situation. Make arrangements to  have someone check on us periodically. I  was told a medical professional asked, “Well, what kind of time-line can we put on grief?” The answer to that question, “Everyone and each situation is different so grief takes as long as it needs to for each individual.” So please give us time, and  please give us permission to grieve.

 

                                                                                    Peace & Light,

Stella Wichman

Certified From Heartbreak to Happiness Coach
 
www.parentsgriefrecovery.com
 

“Who then can so softly bind up the wound of another as he who has felt the same wound himself?”

Thomas Jefferson