Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Loss and Healing in The River Warren :: River
Loss and Healing in The River Warren       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Each of us, in time, will experience a  heart-stopping reality - the death or loss of someone or something we love.  Maybe it will be of a family member or just a pet we dearly cherished, but the  feelings we have are all too real and all too painful. This loss is probably by  far the greatest and most severe emotional trauma we can encounter, and the  sense of loss and grief that follows is a healthy, natural, and important part  of healing ("Death"). In The River Warren by Kent Meyers Jeff Gruber learns to  deal with the grief associated with the loss of his younger brother, Chris. This  grief is perhaps the strongest of all emotions that bind families together, but  it can also be the hardest to overcome. We never really get over these feelings;  we just absorb them into our lives and move on. According to Dr. Elizabeth  Kubler-Ross, there are five basic stages of grief. They are denial and  isolation, anger, bargaining, depression, and finally acceptance. It is n   ot  unusual for people to be lost in one of the first four stages, and until they  move on to acceptance      Ã       their lives may be difficult and even painful ("Stages"). In The River Warren  Jeff Gruber deals with these five stages of grief and finds peace in his life  and with his father.     The first stage of grief is denial and isolation. After Chris's death, life  went on, but it went      on in silence when it came to picking up rocks. Chris had loved to hear about  the glacier that      brought the rocks up, and it was difficult for Jeff and Leo to speak of it.  Despite wanting to      scream at Leo for working and pretending Chris was dead, Jeff could not.  Instead he confides in      his wife saying, "He never really stopped working, Becca. Just kept on  working. Things kept on      growing, and he kept on working." When Becca asked him, "What should he have  done, though?      The world didn't end." his reply was, "Didn't it?" (Meyers 76)      Ã       His father's capacity for work bothered Jeff. To him it seemed as though  nothing had      					    
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