Gustav Hartmann
Warlock
- Aug 28, 2021
- 723
Elysabeth Kubler-Ross identified in her psychological study "On Death and Dying" five stages of grief:
First Stage: Denial
Second Stage: Anger
Third Stage: Bargaining
Fourth Stage: Depression
Fifth Stage: Acceptance
The SS thread "Ways of making peace with dying" brought me to this study. If you reached stage five you made obviously your peace with dying. These five stages are in the first place applicable to people who are facing an inevitable imminent death by a terminal illness or an execution. I wonder if they are applicable for suicidal people too.
This led me to a German book were notes and diaries of four dying people were analysed:
Helmuth von Moltke, regime opponent executed 1945
William McDougalls, psychologist died by cancer 1938
Wolfgang Herrndorf, author deadly brain tumour, suicide 2013
Michael Kohlhaas, Novella by Heinrich von Kleist about a rebel executed 1540
One of this four people committed suicide, thought the death of Michel Kohlhaas could be considered as suicide by court following suicide by cop. Are these five stages of grief applicable for suicidal people or are there fundamental differences? Corresponds the last stage "acceptance" with the committed suicide? This would fit in something I read recently on SS, that depression doesn´t cause suicide, it only happens before. Are the reasons for most suicides as compelling as a terminal illness or an imminent execution?
What do you think?
First Stage: Denial
Second Stage: Anger
Third Stage: Bargaining
Fourth Stage: Depression
Fifth Stage: Acceptance
The SS thread "Ways of making peace with dying" brought me to this study. If you reached stage five you made obviously your peace with dying. These five stages are in the first place applicable to people who are facing an inevitable imminent death by a terminal illness or an execution. I wonder if they are applicable for suicidal people too.
This led me to a German book were notes and diaries of four dying people were analysed:
Helmuth von Moltke, regime opponent executed 1945
William McDougalls, psychologist died by cancer 1938
Wolfgang Herrndorf, author deadly brain tumour, suicide 2013
Michael Kohlhaas, Novella by Heinrich von Kleist about a rebel executed 1540
One of this four people committed suicide, thought the death of Michel Kohlhaas could be considered as suicide by court following suicide by cop. Are these five stages of grief applicable for suicidal people or are there fundamental differences? Corresponds the last stage "acceptance" with the committed suicide? This would fit in something I read recently on SS, that depression doesn´t cause suicide, it only happens before. Are the reasons for most suicides as compelling as a terminal illness or an imminent execution?
What do you think?