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Menopause and the Empty Nest
Details
In this essay, I report on a psychologist's visit to a middle-aged woman with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in the ward of the Clementino Fraga Filho University Hospital in Rio de Janeiro. She, who appeared to be feeling profound sadness, launched into the telling of her story. The lupus disease had broken out at a time when she was going through two significant losses: the departure from home of her only son, who had started working and decided to live alone, and the cessation of menstruation with the arrival of the menopause. She reflected on how much she was still attached to the past, unable to let go of situations that no longer existed. In other words, she had been divorced for a long time, but she was still reproducing the condition she was in when she was married, not allowing herself to open up to new experiences. Thus, the patient, who had been nourished by motherhood and the only marriage she had ever had, was entering a process of illness. The psychological intervention led her to see herself as an independent woman, capable of feeling integrated and alive. By telling people about herself, in a ward environment, she gained an understanding of her illness, which resonated in her dynamics, giving her life a new direction and meaning.
Autorentext
Graduated in Psychology (2004). She has a specialization in Family and Couple Therapy from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (2006). She has been a municipal civil servant since 2009, in the position of Psychologist, at Angra dos Reis City Hall, in the state of Rio de Janeiro, where she works in the Social Development and Citizenship Promotion Department.
Klappentext
In this essay, I report on a psychologist's visit to a middle-aged woman with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in the ward of the Clementino Fraga Filho University Hospital in Rio de Janeiro. She, who appeared to be feeling profound sadness, launched into the telling of her story. The lupus disease had broken out at a time when she was going through two significant losses: the departure from home of her only son, who had started working and decided to live alone, and the cessation of menstruation with the arrival of the menopause. She reflected on how much she was still attached to the past, unable to let go of situations that no longer existed. In other words, she had been divorced for a long time, but she was still reproducing the condition she was in when she was married, not allowing herself to open up to new experiences. Thus, the patient, who had been nourished by motherhood and the only marriage she had ever had, was entering a process of illness. The psychological intervention led her to see herself as an independent woman, capable of feeling integrated and alive. By telling people about herself, in a ward environment, she gained an understanding of her illness, which resonated in her dynamics, giving her life a new direction and meaning.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09786207578818
- Genre Business Encyclopedias
- Sprache Englisch
- Anzahl Seiten 52
- Herausgeber Our Knowledge Publishing
- Größe H220mm x B150mm x T4mm
- Jahr 2024
- EAN 9786207578818
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- ISBN 6207578813
- Veröffentlichung 23.05.2024
- Titel Menopause and the Empty Nest
- Autor Luciana Araújo Gomes Henriques , Valéria Valéria Marques , Carla de Meis
- Untertitel An experience of illness and new meanings
- Gewicht 96g