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PAUSE ![]() ROSSON ELECTED Bob Rosson was recently elected secretary-treasurer of the Mississippi Funeral Directors Association. Bobs election will mean he will serve as president of the statewide organization in 2001-2002. He has served as District Governor on the associations board of directors farther past five years. He was instrumental in establishing a master trust for pre-need funeral funds for the association. As District Governor, Bob represented DeSoto, Marshall, Benton, Tunica, Tate, Coahoma, Quitman, Panola, Lafayette, Bolivar, Tallahatchie, Yalobusha, Calhoun, and Grenada counties. The association, organized in 1906, represents the states funeral service industry. HOSPICE: A Special Kind of Caring Deaths in the family home were commonplace in earlier times. With developments of modern medicine, more and more the hospital became the setting for the last moments of life. While acknowledging the many benefits of modern medicine, a group of clergy, healthcare workers, and others began wondering in the 1970s if the natural process of dying had been robbed of its dignity by turning over much of the care of dying persons to medical personnel and the hospital environment. From their concern, hospice care was born in the United States. Now nearly 2,500 hospices serve people in every state. According to the National Hospice Organization, more than a million patients have utilized the services of hospice. The National Hospice Organization defines hospice as "a special kind of care for dying people, their families, and their caregivers that: treats the physical needs of patients and their emotional and spiritual needs; takes place in the patients home, or in a homelike setting; concentrates on making patients as free of pain and as comfortable as they want to be so they can make the most of the time that remains to them; considers helping family members an essential part of its mission; and believes the quality of life to be as important as the length of life." The Hospice Association believes no job is too big or too small for the hospice team. The team helps in every way it can. This help may include: pain relief through medication; back rubs and foot massages; matters of personal cleanliness and coordination of necessary medical equipment; "being there"to let the patient know he or she is not alone; talking openly about feelings; assisting with household chores and helping to put financial matters in order; providing favorite foods or music; joining in favorite pastimes. Hospice also offers a comprehensive bereavement program for family members following the patients death. Professionals and volunteers maintain contact with the family, offer grief counseling and referrals, and maintain grief support groups. Melissa Kelly in "Using Hospice Care When a Loved One Is Terminally III" (Care Notes, Abbey Press) says: "Watching the person you love die is never easy. But knowing that your loved one can live those last days in dignity and comfort, and that you will be able to care compassionately for your loved one within the circle of your family will be a great solace to you." Baptist Memorial Home Care/Hospice Division, a hospital-based agency which is owned by Baptist Memorial Health Care Development Corporation, operates in this area. Information about availability of hospice can be obtained by contacting the Hospice office between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Their telephone number is 234-8553. PLEASE DONT SHOOT THE PIANIST! Oscar Wilde told of a century-old Leadville, Colorado, saloon with a posted sign: "Please dont shoot the pianist. He is doing his best." There are days when all of us feel like the hard-pressed pianist. We try, oh, so hard but still we attract the bullets. A pastor friend was called out on Saturday night to counsel with teenagers. He was up most of the night and was not at his best on Sunday. The critics didnt ask questions but began firing. A mother tried to balance a full-time job. making a home for the kids and her husband, plus church and school responsibilities. She tried, ever so much, but the bullets struck home as her husband ran away with a more "in tune" woman. The teenager was trying to live a Christian life and remain chaste but his peers were unmerciful as they subjected him to the firing line. In The Spirituality of Imperfection, Ernest Kurtz quotes Commissioner of Baseball, Francis T. Vincent: "Baseball teaches us, or has taught most of us, how to deal with failure. We learn at a very young age that failure is the norm in baseball and, precisely because we have failed, we hold in high regard those who fail less often. I also find it fascinating that baseball, alone in sports, considers errors to be part of the game, part of its rigorous truth." Try to remember that the next time you are trying your best at the piano and the bullets begin to fly. from The Baptist Record, June 3,1993. WAYS TO HELP THE GRIEVING Many people feel inadequate when there is a death. Here are some suggestions to help better comfort the grieving. Respond immediately. As soon as you learn there has been a death, call expressing sympathy. "Im so sorry" is sufficient. Ask if you can do anything practicalshop, drive, provide child care, etc. Refrain from giving advice. Dont give advice unless it is specifically requested. Respect personal grieving styles. Some individuals welcome companions who will come to the house to sit with them or even spend the night. Others, however, need more space and distance, preferring to be alone. Avoid platitudes. Never say, "I know how you feel," unless you too have experienced a loss to death. Even them, clarify that statement by saying, "I know how you feel because my sister died three years ago." Other platitudes that are not helpful include: Hes out of his misery now; shes in a better place; its a blessing this happened; he had a long life; at least she didnt suffer; or time heals all wounds. A simple, "Im sorry" or a hand-shake or embrace convey more loving concern than empty platitudes. Listen with your heart. Let the griever do most of the talking. Ask the griever how he/she feels. Then listen attentively. Dont be intimidated by tears. Listening and sharing the pain shows you care. Mention the name of the deceased. Survivors want to talk about their loved one. Using the name tells a survivor you are open to hearing more about him or her. Dont mention remarriage or replacement. Never tell a younger widow or widower: "You can get married again." Similarly, never tell grieving parents: "You can have other children." While both statements may be true, they are statements that discount the loss for the grieving. Remember that family members grieve differently. Respect the fact that family members, suffering the same loss, mourn different. A man whose father died suddenly recalls his surprise at the grieving patterns of family members: "One of my brothers, the proverbial strong-but-silent type, was weeping openly and often, while one of my sisters, whose emotions are usually right on the surface, was with dry-eyed efficiency coordinating the funeral arrangements, handling the phone calls." The lesson: different personalities have different grieving styles. All should be respected. Spread out your support. While the familys greatest need for practical help is right after the death, their greatest need for emotional support may be much later, particularly on special occasions: birthdays, anniversaries and holidays. The lesson: be there early with practical helpbringing food, running errands or providing child carebut continue to provide emotional support over the next 12-24 months. Never say, "Dont cry." Tears bring healing, both physically and emotionally. When someone we love dies, it is quite natural to cry. Get comfortable with tears, both from the bereaved and from yourself. Dont second-guess God. Saying that a tragic death was "the will of God" can be both cruel and untrue. Avoid trying to give theological explanations for why someone died. Just quietly be with your friend and let him or her express their feelings freely. God does not need our defenses nor should God be assigned blame and responsibility for a tragedy. Discourage the making of major changes. This is a good rule for the bereaved: whatever changes can wait, should wait. Most grief counselors recommend avoiding making any changes for at least one full year following a death. Write out a memory of the deceased and mail it to the griever. Put down on paper an event you shared with the deceased or how you felt about the person or something you recall the deceased doing which impressed you. Then mail it to the survivor. Educate yourself about grief issues. Many people who try to comfort a traumatized person fail because they lack experience and information. When someone you know experiences a death, go to a library or bookstore [Editors note: or funeral home] and get some books on grief. Read them carefully so that you will be better equipped to help your friend. Be patient with the grieving. People heal and recover from grief but it always takes longer than most people expect. A recovery time of three to five years is not unusual, so be very patient with the bereaved. Never rush the grieving or try to force them to "get over it." That pressure usually comes from family and friends who have their own discomfort about the bereaveds naturally depressing feelings. Selected from 19 Ways to Help the Grieving by Victor M. Parachin Reprinted with the permission of the National Funeral Directors Association, The Director, NFDA Publication, Inc., June 1997. PRAYER Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope: where there is darkness, light; and where there is sadness, joy. O, Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console, to be understood as to understand, to be loved as to love; for it is in giving that we receive; it is in pardoning that we are pardoned, and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. St. Francis
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