Hello! I'd like to dedicate this post to the reasons why sibling loss is important. The hardest part about losing a sibling is that you feel alone. You live your entire life as an extension of your sibling and then they are gone and no one seems to understand why you are so affected. This does not make sense if you were to look at the minute literature available pertaining to sibling loss. Here are 6 reasons why sibling loss matters.
- Everyone is so concerned with the parents' and spouse's loss that the sibling is left to fend for herself. While she was used to the ability to lean on her parents during times of despair, now she has to be the strong one while ignoring her own feelings. This happened to DeVita-Raeburn, the author of The Empty Room: Surviving the Loss of a Brother or Sister at any Age, after the death of her brother because “everyone had seemed to understand their loss. But no one understood [hers]” (29).
- According to research, sibling loss can lead to “aggression, social withdrawal, and depression” in the surviving sibling (Archer 217).
- In addition, it can lead to “shock, numbness, preoccupation, anniversary reactions, confusion, hallucinations, depression, anger, sleeping difficulties, lack of concentration, and loneliness” and one third of surviving siblings in one study had suicidal thoughts after the death of their sibling (Archer 217-218).
- Bank and Kahn, two experts in the field of sibling relationships, believe that this slight needs to be corrected because of the severe emotional reactions that occur when a sibling loses her brother or sister (295).
- When the siblings serve “as an extension of the other’s self, death makes the survivor a psychological amputee” (Bank and Kahn 283). This feeling is also reiterated in DeVita-Raeburn’s book repeatedly.
- The sibling also feels as if she shares in the death of her sibling because they “shared a life and so, in turn, [they] share the death” (Mathias 198).
The overlook of sibling loss as an acceptable form of grief is unacceptable. Siblings hurt, just like the parents and spouses. I have always looked toward books to comfort me when I encounter problems in my life. I felt abandoned by my usual comforting friend when I realized that he was not available to me after the worst event of my life. There are very few nonfiction books available on the subject of sibling grief. I know that I cannot be alone in this feeling because many people consider reading books to be a form of therapy (Brennan 31). I believe that the best way to combat this lack is by educating people about the ramifications that occur after one loses a sibling.
Works Cited
Archer, John. The Nature of Grief: The Evolution and Psychology of Reactions to Loss.
London: Routledge, 1999.
Bank, Stephen P. and Michael D. Kahn. The Sibling Bond. New York: Basic Books, 1982.
Brennan, Geraldine. “Books the New Healers.” Times Educational Supplement. 31
August 2001. p.31.
DeVita-Raeburn, Elizabeth. The Empty Room: Surviving the Loss of a Brother or Sister
at any Age. New York: Scribner, 2004.
Mathias. Barbara. Between Sisters: Secret Rivals, Intimate Friends. New York:
Delacorte Press, 1992.
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