Thanatology
At-Need Counseling
A death has occurred and the funeral director is advising the family from the time the death occurs until the final disposition including selection of services and merchandise during the arrangement conference.
Ambiguous Response
A disconfirming response with more than one meaning, leaving the other party unsure of the responder's position.
Ceremony
A formal or symbolic act or observance.
Communication
A general term for the exchange of information, feelings, thoughts, and acts between two or more people, including both verbal and nonverbal aspects of this interchange.
Crisis
A highly emotional temporary state in which an individual's feelings of anxiety grief, confusion or pain impair his or her ability to act.
Death Anxiety
A learned emotional response to death-related phenomenon which is characterized by extreme apprehension.
Client-Centered (Non-Directive; Rogerian; Person-Centered) Counseling
A phrase coined by Carl Rogers to refer to that type of counseling where one comes actively and voluntarily to gain help on a problem, but without any notion of surrendering his own responsibility for the situations; a non-directive method of counseling which stresses the inherent worth of the client and the natural capacity for growth and health.
Euphemism
A pleasant term substituted for a more direct, less pleasant term.
Griefwork (Lindemann)
A process occurring with losses aimed at loosening the attachment to that which has been lost for appropriate reinvestment.
Humanistic
A school of psychological thought that emphasizes the uniqueness of the individual and the search for self-actualization.
Grief syndrome (Lindemann)
A set of symptoms associated with loss.
Extemporaneous Speech
A speech planned in advance but presented in a direct, conversational manner.
Anxiety
A state of tension, typically characterized by rapid heartbeat, shortness of breath and, other similar ramifications of arousal of the autonomic nervous system; an emotion characterized by a vague fear or premonition that something undesirable is going to happen.
Counseling (Ohlsen)
A therapeutic experience for reasonably healthy persons. Do not confuse this with Psychotherapy which is treatment for emotionally disturbed persons, who seek, or are referred for assistance with pathological problems. A counselor's clients are encouraged to seek assistance before they develop serious neurotic, psychotic, or chacterological disorders.
Empathy
According to Carl Rogers, a counselor's capacity to understand the subjective world of the client and communicating this deep understanding to the client.
Congruence
According to client-centered counseling, the necessary quality of a counselor being in touch with reality and with others perception of oneself.
A.I.D.S.
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
Counseling (Webster)
Advice, especially that given as a result of consultation.
Consensus
Agreement between group members about a decision
Euthanasia (right to die)
An act or practice of allowing the death of persons suffering from a life-limiting condition.
Grief
An emotion or set of emotions due to a loss that is involved in the work of mourning.
Conflict
An expressed struggle between at least two interdependent parties who perceive incompatible goals, scarce rewards, and interference from the other party in achieving their goals.
Funeral rite
An organized, flexible, purposeful, group centered, time-limited response to death which reflects reverence, dignity, and respect.
Defense Mechanisms
An unconscious, irrational means used by the ego to defend against anxiety.
Ego Defense Mechanisms
An unconscious, irrational menas used bythe ego to defned against anxiety.
Counseling (Jackson)
Any time someone helps someone else with a problem.
Guilt
Blame directed toward one's self based on real or unreal conditions.
Focusing
Centering a client's thinking and feelings on the situation causing a problem and assisting the person in choosing the behavior or adjustment to solve the problem.
Coping
Charactistic ways of responding to stress.
Encoding
Converting information into a form that can be entered into memory.
Directive Counseling
Counselor takes a live speaking role, asking questions, suggesting courses of action, etc.
Emotions
Feelings such as happiness, anger or grief, created by brain patterns accompanied by bodily changes.
Counseling Psychology
From the Latin, "to know;" the study of the origins and consequences of thoughts, memories, beliefs, perceptions, explanations, and other mental processes.
Counseling (Rogers)
Good communication within and between men; or good (free) communication within or between men is always therapeutic.
Complicated (abnormal, unresolved) Grief
Grief extending over a long period of time without resolution.
Chronic Grief
Grief in which the reaction is one that is excessive in duration and never comes to a satisfactory conclusion.
Absent Grief
Grief in which there appears to be no signs of grief in a person following a major bereavement.
Exaggerated Grief (Worden)
Grief responses whereby the loss is so overwhelming, that some psychiatric disorder develops, such as clinical depression. Persons are usually conscious of the relationship of the reaction to the death, but the reaction to the current experience is excessive and disabling.
Grief counseling
Helping people facilitate uncomplicated grief to a healthy completioin of the tasks of grieving within a reasonable time frame.
Hospice
Historically, an inn for travelers, especially one kept by a religious order; also used to indicate an institution designed to treat patients with a life limiting condition.
Faulty Assumption
Incorrect assumptions that lead us to believe that we have heard the message before or that the message is too simple or too complex to understand.
Delayed Grief (Worden)
Inhibited, suppressed or postponed response to a loss.
Crisis Counseling
Interventions for a highly emotional, temporary state in which individuals, overcome by feelings of anxiety, grief, confusion or pain are unable to act in a realistic, normal manner. Intentional responses which help individuals in a crisis situation.
Anomic Grief
Is a term to describe the experience of grief, especially in young bereaved parents, where mourning customs are unclear due to an inappropriate death and the absence of prior bereavement experience; typical in a society that has attempted to minimize the impact of death through medical control of disease and social control of those who deal with the dying and the dead.
Anger
Is blame directed toward another person.
Alarm
Is defined as fear or anxiety caused by the sudden realization of danger created by the impact of the shock.
Affect
Is the feelings and their expression.
Attachment (Bowlby)
It is the tendency in human beings to make strong affectional bounds with others coming from the need for security and safety; attachment occurs in the absence of the reinforcement of drives for food and sex and provides a way to understand the strong emotional reaction that occurs when these bonds are threatened or broken
Empathetic Listening
Listening in which the goal is to help the speaker solve a problem.
Evaluative Listening
Listening in which the goal is to judge the quality of accuracy of speaker's remarks.
Goals
Objectives or adjustments to be achieved.
Environment
Physical location and personal history surrounding the communication.
Alternatives
Providing a choice of services and merchandise available as families make a selection and complete funeral arrangements, formulating different actions in adjusting to a crisis.
Displaced Aggression
Redirecting anger toward a person or object other than the one who caused the anger originally.
Displacement
Redirection of emotion to other targets.
Grief therapy (Worden)
Specialized techniques which are used to help people with complicated grief reactions.
Fear
Strong emotion marked by such reactions as alarm, dread, and disquieting.
Guidance
Support or support system provided to the counselee who is seeking an alternative adjustment to problems.
Anticipatory Grief
Syndrome characterized by the presence of grief in anticipation of death or loss; the actual death comes as a confirmation of knowledge of a life-limiting condition.
Defensive Listening
Taking innocent comments as personal attacks.
Empathy (Wolfelt)
The ability to perceive another's experience and communicate that perception back to the person.
Genuineness (Wolfelt)
The ability to present oneself sincerely.
Bereavement
The act or event of separation or loss that results in the experience of grief.
Credibility
The believability of a speaker or other source of information.
Denial
The defense mechanism by which a person refuses to see things as they are because such facts are threatening to the ego; a defense mechanism, closely related to repression, in which the individual simply denies the existence of the events that have aroused anxiety.
Feedback
The discernible response of the receiver.
Connotation
The emotional associations of a term.
Climate
The emotional tone of a relationship as it is expressed in the messages that the partners send and receive.
Clinical Psychology
The field of psychology which is designed to understand, diagnose and treat abnormal or deviant behavior.
Educational Psychology
The field of psychology which studies education systems, methods of teaching, methods of learning, curricula and other factors that influence the learning process.
Cognitive Psychology
The field of psychology which studies internal mental processes, which include thinking, memory, concept formation, perception, and the processing of information.
Developmental Psychology
The field of psychology which study the way in which behaviors develop and change during a lifespan.
Counselor
The individual providing assistance and guidance.
Counseled
The individual seeking assistance or guidance.
Adaptation
The individual's ability to adjust to the psychological and emotional changes brought on by a stressful event such as the death of a significant other.
Acute Grief
The intense physical and emotional expression of grief occurring as the awareness increases of a loss of someone or something significant.
Agression
The intentional infliction of physical or psychological harm on another.
Homicide
The killing of one human being by another.
Channel
The medium through which a message passes from sender to receiver.
Denotation
The objective, emotion-free meaning of a term.
Emotion
The outward expression or display of mood or feeling states.
Emotional expression
The outward expression or display of mood or feeling states.
Attending (listening)
The process of focusing on certain stimuli from the environment.
Articulation
The process of pronouncing all the necessary parts of a word.
Committal Service
The rite of finality in a funeral service preceding cremation, earth burial, entombment or burial at sea.
Biological Psychology
The school of psychological thought in which all our behaviors can be traced to the biological functions of the brain. Therefore most of our behaviors are caused by the chemicals of our physical body.
Cognitive Approach
The school of psychological thought in which the simplest matters are studied, such as perception of objects, attention, pattern recognition, memory, language, reading and writing.
Behaviorism
The school of psychological thought that views learning as the most important aspect of an organism's development. Behaviorism seeks to objectively measure behavior and the way in which stimulus-response relationships are formed.
Functionalism
The school of psychological thought which proposed that the function, not the structure, of conscious experience should be studied.
Frustration
The state of being prevented from attaining a purpose; thwarted; the blocking of the motive satisfaction by some kind of obstacle.
Alienation
The state of estrangement an individual feels in social settings that are viewed as foreign, unpredictable or unacceptable.
Funeral Service Psychology
The study of human behavior as related to funeral service.
Cognition
The study of the origins and consequences of thoughts, memories, beliefs, perceptions, explanations and other mental processes.
Facilitate
To assist understanding of the circumstances or situations the individual is experiencing, and to assist that person in the selection of an alternative adjustment if necessary.
Discrimination
Treating members of various social groups differently in circumstances where their rights or treatment should be identical.
Dyad
Two units regarded as a pair; for example, husband and wife.
Equivocal
Words that have more than one dictionary meaning.
Attitude
a learned tendency to respond to people, objects, or institutions in a positive or negative way.
Abnormal (complicated, unresolved) grief
grief extending over a long period of time without resolution.
Aftercare (post-funeral counseling)
those appropriate and helpful acts of counseling that come after the funeral
