![]() But the reason I’m not sure I agree with it is because it’s more like a wanting and a craving for something than an attachment. Holly: You know, a lot of people have been saying that, and even some of my most respected colleagues, and I get why people say that because it just feels right. But grief is that expression of different type of love. It’s a different type of expression of love. And they were talking about how in some ways, grief is also, it’s an expression of love. So you feel like there’s this craving, that’s a yearning and craving and longing for something loved.Įric: I was listening to radio and there was yesterday and there was a discussion about grief and music. It’s a constellation of symptoms that really evoke a feeling of wanting that thing back because you feel like on many levels, you just need that thing to be your best you. You have these pangs of anger and bitterness like why them? So it’s a yearning and a craving and a loss of meaning and identity, bitterness, feeling stunned, shocked, disbelief over what happened. And so you don’t know who you are without this person. And so grief is that yearning and craving and pining for someone or something that you love and you’ve lost. Holly: So grief in a nutshell is wanting what you can’t have. And I’d love to hear from you how do you conceptualize grief? But I feel like before I can actually understand what prolong grief disorder is I feel like I have to have a better understanding of what grief is. Įric: Dan Malach also loves to give you hard ones, Alex.Įric: So we’re not going to be here talking about all of Alex’s songs, but we are here to talk about prolonged grief disorder. I would always choose…Īlex: Female diva singer song. I don’t know if you know this, but people do like to tweak me and they choose intentionally incredibly difficult songs for me.Įric: That’s why I can never select Alex’s song. That’s why that song blew me away.Įric: I don’t think you’ve done a BTS song, Alex.Īlex: No. When he does that with the people from BTS, it’s like everything’s on the left speaker and then everything’s on the right speaker. Did you have to learn that this week?Īlex: Fortunately that was much easier than some of the other songs that you were considering like Left and Right by what’s his name, Charlie? That line just kind of tickled me, soĪlex: Tom Waits has great lyrics. And I even like a little dose of pragmatism when they say come down from the cross, we could use the wood. I don’t like that it’s suffering, but I like that it’s sort of a flippant view of suffering that we all go through, trials and tribulations, and try not to take yourself so seriously is sort of the message. My song request is Come On Up To The House by Tom Waits. Before we jump in the topic, do you have a song request for Alex? And it’s a pleasure to be here and to finally meet Eric.Įric: Well, we got a lot to talk about. Holly: Oh, thank you, Alex, my star mentee. ![]() We’re going to talk to her about prolonged grief disorder today. There are any number of things we could talk to her about, coping with cancer, et cetera. She has conducted a number of landmark studies. This is Eric Widera.Įric: And Alex, who do we have with us today?Īlex: We are so fortunate to be joined by one of my former mentors who I’ve known for 20 years, Holly Prigerson, who is now Irving Sherwood Wright Professor of Geriatrics at Weill Cornell Medical School and Professor of Sociology and Medicine and Director of the Center for Research on End Of Life Care.
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