Significant loss, including but not limited to bereavement, can disrupt our practical identities, dislodge relationships with others, and alter our experience of belonging in place and time. Adaptive grieving involves reconstructing a world of meaning that is enacted in the physical and social environment and shaped by cultural scripts. Aesthetic activities are embodied and help orient mourners in space and time, providing tangible ways to navigate the paradoxes of presence and absence and integrate changes in relationships with self and other. Engaging the creative imagination to shape loss experiences can create opportunities for emotional awareness and expression, symbolic communication, self-regulation, creativity, and new perspectives, in service of meaning-making and renewed vitality. This module will focus on the use of the visual arts, music, and drama with grievers. It will include theoretical and empirical support for the expressive arts in grief, along with experiential practice. Cultural considerations and strategies will also be addressed.
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