Buy Kazazz Shopping Viagra Viagra Buy Viagra Buy Viagra 50 Mg Buy Viagra Low Cost Buy Gel Viagra Buy Online Pharmacy Viagra Buy Viagra Prescription Online Buy Real Viagra Online Viagra Sale Buy Brand Buy From Name Usa Viagra Free Viagra In The Uk Best Price For Generic Viagra Natural Viagra Substitutes Buy Viagra On The Internet Viagra Tablets P2 Pharmacy Uk Generic Viagra India Can I Take Viagra Wholesale Viagra Where Can I Buy Illegal Viagra Herbal Viagra Equivalent Effects Alcohol Viagra Canadian Pharmacy Viagra Overseas Viagra Ingredients Of Viagra How To Make Viagra Viagra Online Stores Viagra London Viagra Generic Brand Super Viagra
Back to the main page of this blog The Podcast Network Website
Want to host your own show on TPN?

Dead Serious #004

Dead Serious #004 (MP3 – 13.1MB – 37min)
LISTEN HERE

Dead Serious…..”Everybody Hurts, …….sometimes”
This week’s episode of Dead Serious looks how a significant death can impact on our lives. How do we feel when we know someone we love is not going to ‘get better’. How do we talk about an imminent death in our families? Is there a pattern in the experiences of different families?
I interview fellow TPN Host Ian Dixon, who generously discusses his personal experiences with the illness and death of his mother and how his family responded, where he found support and how he made personal ‘meaning’ of his experience.
This episode also poses the questions:
- Is there one person in the family who is forced to ‘take control’?
- How do families support each other?
- What happens when dying people have little social support?
- How do work colleagues and employers respond when there is a bereavement in their workplace?

This is an episode that poses a number of questions we need to consider. Are we compassionate people? Do we show support to dying, grieving and sad people in our communities and if we don’t know how to, what can we do to educate ourselves?

4 Responses to “Dead Serious #004”

  1. Cameron Reilly Says:

    great show Molly & Ian! Very touching to hear someone talk publically about the grieving process. I can relate a lot. My dad died a couple of years ago, aged 53, within 90 days of being diagnosed with cancer. He had just split up from my mum and he and I had never been close. So although I saw him a month before he died, and we had a chance to make our peace, I couldn’t bring myself to go to his funeral. Something I now regret. Years of therapy later…

  2. Shep Jeffreys Says:

    I have just published a book: HELPING GRIEVING PEOPLE—WHEN TEARS ARE NOT ENOUGH (ROUTLEDGE (2005) AND WOULD LIKE TO BE INTERVIEWED BY MOLLY. I appreciate what you are doing to advance the understqanding about grief and end-of-life concerns. My website contains excerpts and other information about the book. www.griefcareprovider.com.

    I am a former staff associate of Elisabeth Kubler-Ross.

    Thanks and keep up the great work.

    Shep Jeffreys

    Shep Jeffreys

  3. Shep Jeffreys Says:

    Shep Jeffreys jeffreys3@comcast.net

    www.griefcareprovider.com

  4. Molly Says:

    Thanks for your support Shep, it’s greatly appreciated!

    Molly

Leave a Reply