Can sense of presence experiences in bereavement be conceptualised as spiritual phenomena? moreCo-authored with Adrian Coyle. Published in 2010 in Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 13(3), 273-291. Please contact me if you would like a copy of this paper but experience difficulty in locating it. |
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Bereavement, Spirituality, Meaning-making, Meaning Reconstruction, Post-Traumatic Growth, Continuing bonds, and Anomalous Experience
Menial Health, Religion & Culture
Vol. 13, No. 3, April 2010, 273-291
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RESEARCH ARTICLE
Can "sense of presence" experiences in bereavement be conceptualised
as spiritual phenomena?
Edith Steffen* and Adrian Coyle
Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, UK
(Received 21 September 2008; final version received 9 December 2008)
This article explores the possibility of conceptualising the frequently occurring
experience of "sensing the presence of the deceased" in bereavement as a spiritual
phenomenon and examines how such a conceptualisation can be related to two
recent perspectives in the field of bereavement research, "continuing bonds" and
"meaning-ma king." It is argued that "sense of presence" experiences are
expressions of the continuing relationship with the deceased that can be
spiritually understood but that pose various challenges for their meaningful
integration into the bereaved person's worldview or meaning structures -
something that may need to be more explicitly incorporated into current
theoretical frameworks. It is suggested that these experiences can be the catalyst
for "post-traumatic growth" through a socially mediated and interactive
narrative exploration and that this has important implications for bereavement
counselling and therapy.
Keywords: bereavement; continuing bonds; meaning-making; meaning recon-
struction; post-traumatic growth; sense of presence; spirituality
Introduction
In recent years, there has been a growing recognition in the Western bereavement literature
that an ongoing relationship with the deceased can be normal and potentially adaptive
(Klass, Silverman, & Nickman, 1996). The "continuing bonds" perspective, which has
been informed by insights gained from cross-cultural studies, constitutes a radical
departure from the formerly dominant view that emotional disengagement from the
deceased should be the goal of mourning (Bowlby, 1998; Freud, 1917; Parkes, J998).
Having interactions with the dead is now not necessarily viewed as a "hallucinatory
wishful psychosis" (Freud, 1917) but, for example, from an attachment theory-based
perspective, as a non-pathologicai means of coping that serves "secure base" functions
■when adjusting to grief (Field, Gao, & Paderna, 2005). A continuing bond is, however, not
necessarily seen to be adjustment-promoting in itself (Stroebe & Schut, 2005). Rather, the
interaction of ongoing attachment and meaning reconstruction processes is thought to
predict bereavement outcome (Neimeyer, Baldwin, & Gillies, 2006).
It has been observed that the availability of relevant spiritual or religious
frameworks for meaning-making may lead to better coping (Benore & Park, 2004),
benefit-finding (Richards, Acree, & Folkman, 1999) or even post-trauma tic growth
*Corresponding author. Email: E.Steffen@surrey.ac.uk
tSSN 1367- 4676 print/ISSN 1469-9737 online
© 2010 Taylor & Francis
DOf: !0.1030/13674670903J57S44
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