During this period of bereavement although I was surrounded by my immediate family and my husband, the rituals and logistics encroached all our time and energy restricting the time I had to interact with my husband. There were intermittent periods were the feelings of being isolated and intense sadness would emerge manifesting itself as anger and irritation on the task at hand or people I am interacting with. This process could be related as periods of oscillation between feelings of being completely in control to periods where I lacked self-control. Based on attachment theory, Stroebe & Schut (1999) conceptualise this model of bereavement as dual process model in which an individual processes and adapts to their losses by alternating between two conflicting process; “loss orientation” process and “restoration orientation” process. They postulate that in loss orientation the individual processes the grief of having lost a loved one by dealing with feelings of sadness, anger or guilt, and seek respite from grieving by doing restoration orientated tasks like dealing with the practicalities of the life and tending to logistical and environmental needs (Stroebe & Schut,
During this period of bereavement although I was surrounded by my immediate family and my husband, the rituals and logistics encroached all our time and energy restricting the time I had to interact with my husband. There were intermittent periods were the feelings of being isolated and intense sadness would emerge manifesting itself as anger and irritation on the task at hand or people I am interacting with. This process could be related as periods of oscillation between feelings of being completely in control to periods where I lacked self-control. Based on attachment theory, Stroebe & Schut (1999) conceptualise this model of bereavement as dual process model in which an individual processes and adapts to their losses by alternating between two conflicting process; “loss orientation” process and “restoration orientation” process. They postulate that in loss orientation the individual processes the grief of having lost a loved one by dealing with feelings of sadness, anger or guilt, and seek respite from grieving by doing restoration orientated tasks like dealing with the practicalities of the life and tending to logistical and environmental needs (Stroebe & Schut,