Healing Your Heart

治愈你的心

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2022-04-05

49 分钟
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We’ve all heard about the five stages of grief. But what happens when your experience doesn’t follow that model at all? Resilience researcher Lucy Hone began to question how we think about grief after a devastating loss in her own life. She shares the techniques she learned to help her cope with tragedy.
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  • This is hidden brain.

  • I'm Shankar Vedantam.

  • In the 1960s, the psychologist Elizabeth Kubler Ross was studying patients with terminal illnesses.

  • She noticed a pattern as they came to terms with their mortality.

  • The patient seemed to go through different psychological phases.

  • Elizabeth Kubler Ross eventually classified these phases into what she called the five stages of grief, denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.

  • The five stages were intuitively appealing and offered people a way to understand a complex experience.

  • Very quickly, the simplicity of this framework began to seep into popular culture, books, tv shows, and later countless YouTube videos.

  • Your mind is protecting you by completely denying the reality numbness may follow.

  • It's nature's way of letting you deal only with your emotions that you're capable of handling.

  • As often happens, a system that was designed to be descriptive became prescriptive.

  • The five stages, translated into popular culture, morphed into a model that told people they should expect to feel certain emotions and that their experience of grief would be a journey from one stage to the next.

  • Finally, five is acceptance.

  • It's the fifth stage and this is the end game here.

  • And it is the result of all the stages of your grief.

  • Over time, the five stage model of grief became so ingrained in people's minds that new insights based on rigorous research did not get as much airtime.

  • For decades, the popular understanding of what we feel when we grieve was largely drawn from the five stages model.

  • Anyone who's ever been bereaved will know that people tell you about them, they expect you to go through them.

  • And pretty quickly I became frustrated with them because I don't want to be.

  • Told what I'm going to feel.