As long as you need Permission to grieve

J. S. Park

Book - 2024

"In a world that often chooses to ignore pain and suffering, J.S. Park provides an unflinching look at the one human experience that cannot be easily explained away: grief. As a hospital chaplain, he has seen all manner of sickness and pain--terminal patients, estranged families, and victims of devastating accidents. Using stories from his own life experience and his many hours in the hospital, Chaplain Park unpacks the various losses that lead to grief--loss of loved ones, loss of autonomy, loss of health, and loss of plans and dreams."--page 4 of cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Self-help publications
Published
Nashville, Tennessee : W Publishing Group, an imprint of Thomas Nelson [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
J. S. Park (author)
Physical Description
xiii, 225 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-224).
ISBN
9781400336845
  • Introduction: Bravo, memory, honor
  • Part One: Losing spirit. Loss of future dreams: A skip in time
  • Loss of faith: a hole-shped God
  • Part Two: Losing mind. Loss of mental health: All we could have done
  • Part Three: Losing body. Loss of autonomy: Most of all your self
  • Loss of humanity: Grief, rage, and the unmade
  • Part Four: Losing heart. Loss of connection: Lifting in mist, we drift
  • Loss of loved ones: you go, I go
  • Epilogue: Every wound is a calling
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • About the author.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Park (The Voices We Carry) extends a heartfelt invitation for grieving readers to refrain from "sprinting to closure" and instead mourn on their own timelines. Drawing on his experience as a hospital chaplain, he outlines four types of loss--physical, spiritual, mental, and relational--and the challenges of each, such as losing bodily autonomy (the inability to move or eat on one's own, for example) or the curtailing of dreams, as experienced by a mother with stillborn triplets who, in a particularly harrowing anecdote, asked the author to narrate what their futures might have been. According to Park, grief is "not something you get over, but something you carry everywhere you go." Though there's plenty of gentle advice--construct a healthy support system, grieve in community--readers will welcome Park's willingness to raise as many questions as he answers, whether he's describing his patients' challenges or his own, including how his faith disintegrated early on in his chaplaincy, when he often felt that "prayers are radio waves but God has no antenna, no receiver, no face." It's an excellent resource for those working their way through loss. (Apr.)

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