ebook img

Ways of Being: The alchemy of bereavement and communique PDF

487 Pages·2015·4.39 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Ways of Being: The alchemy of bereavement and communique

Copyright and use of this thesis This thesis must be used in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. Reproduction of material protected by copyright may be an infringement of copyright and copyright owners may be entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. Section 51 (2) of the Copyright Act permits an authorized officer of a university library or archives to provide a copy (by communication or otherwise) of an unpublished thesis kept in the library or archives, to a person who satisfies the authorized officer that he or she requires the reproduction for the purposes of research or study. The Copyright Act grants the creator of a work a number of moral rights, specifically the right of attribution, the right against false attribution and the right of integrity. You may infringe the author’s moral rights if you: - fail to acknowledge the author of this thesis if you quote sections from the work - attribute this thesis to another author - subject this thesis to derogatory treatment which may prejudice the author’s reputation For further information contact the University’s Copyright Service. sydney.edu.au/copyright Faculty of Education and Social Work Division of Doctoral Studies Ways of Being: The alchemy of bereavement and communiqué Michele T Knight This thesis is presented for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Social Work of The University of Sydney NSW, Australia 2011 Dedication This thesis is dedicated to my mother and to my son. Embodying what has gone before, and what is yet to come, their lives conjoin to create what is now. 3 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g Acknowledgements A social science research study positioned within the body of enquiry of bereavement exploring the subjectivity of after-death encounters occurring between bereaved individuals and the deceased, defined by the study as communiqué, takes the individual into fathomless depths. It is there in those depths that the unseen is seen, the unknown known, and the unspoken spoken. The echo from those depths and the experiences of those who plumbed them are rendered in print on the following pages. I would like to acknowledge and thank my supervisors, Associate Professor Lindsey Napier and Dr Margo Rawsthorne, whose expertise, critique and support of the study guided it to its completion. I also acknowledge with the highest regard the co- researchers who participated in the study. Their willingness to participate and their support and enthusiasm for the study never once faltered. Their generosity in sharing a deeply private and profoundly meaningful aspect of their life is a true testament to the courage of the human spirit. There are many who have believed in this study and whose faith has endorsed it. Of these I would like to acknowledge Ms Jackie Adams and Mr Sol Cohen. I also acknowledge the time and effort of Dr Stephen Juan, Ashley Montagu Fellow for the Public Understanding of Human Sciences, Faculty of Education and Social Work, the University of Sydney, who edited the thesis for clarity of text, syntax and grammar. 4 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g Abstract This qualitative research study utilises heuristic enquiry (Moustakas, 1990) to explore the natures and meanings of communiqué; unexpected and unsought after-death encounters occurring between bereaved individuals and the person/s close to them who died, the deceased. The study has its origin in the author’s own lived experience of bereavement which provided the psychosocial and psychospiritual context for her experiences of the returning deceased. The study focuses on the lived experience of these encounters and explores them in open-ended interviews with twenty-one bereaved men and women. Together with the author they embark upon a journey of self-discovery and self-awareness, plumbing the depths of sorrow and anguish to discover for themselves an internal reservoir of resilience, a greater sense of connectedness, renewed hope and a new way of being in the world. Their perceptions reveal that the impact of a death, regardless of its nature, can be traumatic and difficult enough without the added complexity of communiqué, after-death encounters, occurring between themselves and the deceased. As they shared their stories, they constructed their own bereavement narratives in accordance with what death, life after death, after-death encounters and spirituality meant for them. These narratives reveal that the impact of their communiqué challenged how they defined and understood themselves as human beings, how they defined and understood themselves as spiritual beings, and how they lived in their metaphorically visible social and cultural worlds. 5 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g Glossary of Terms The following terms are utilised in the study in order to establish and distinguish key contexts and relevant relationships: Alchemy Within the context of the study, the term alchemy or alchemical is analogous with and informed by Carl Jung’s interpretation and understanding of the scientific practice of alchemy as an external representation of internal psychospiritual transformation and growth. Alchemy, which strove to scientifically transmute base metals into gold and considered to be the forerunner of modern chemistry, is a correspondential representation of the development of the human psyche and of the psychological process of individuation. “Alchemy represents the projection of a drama both in cosmic and spiritual terms. The opus magnum had two aims: the rescue of the human soul and the salvation of the world ...” (1977, p 228). Thus, the terms alchemy or alchemical correspond to the metaphor of self-change and psychospiritual growth through transformation. Being Within the context of the study, being is a term analogous with that which is known through direct experience. Through means of observation, sensing and feeling, the individual can gain an intimate awareness of their being. “In the simplest and most direct form, we can say that being is you, what you are … to have being is to be alive, to exist. The affirmation ‘I am’ is a declaration that I exist as a living being” (personal communication, P.W. Groves, 24 May 1998). 6 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g Bereavement Within the context of the study, bereavement is contextualised as the subjective experience of a death-event and can be described as “the objective situation of having lost someone significant” (Stroebe, Stroebe & Hanson, 2005, p. 5). DeSpelder and Strickland define bereavement as the experience of the loss by death of a significant other, or of someone close. It derives from a root word meaning shorn off or torn up. Thus “at root, bereavement conveys a sense of being deprived, of having some part of one stripped away against one’s will, of an intense disruptive force over which there is no control” (2005, p. 268). Communiqué Within the context of the study communiqué is utilised as a collective term referring to after-death encounter phenomena occurring between a bereaved individual and the deceased. These subjectively meaningful after-death encounters are diverse and occur when the now disembodied and non-material person/s, after experiencing their own death, spontaneously and without assistance or provocation from any embodied individual, engage and interact with the bereaved individual in a manner deemed by that individual to be significant or meaningful. Co-researcher Within the context of the study, the term co-researcher denotes study participant. Heuristic inquiry acknowledges participants who contribute primary data in the research process as co-researchers (Moustakas, 1990). The essence of heuristic inquiry is the intersection between the researcher and the co- researcher of a shared commonality of a particular subjective experience. In a heuristic study the researcher brings the subjective experience of the topic of investigation to the co- researcher as the co-researcher brings that same subjective 7 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g experience to the researcher. Both originate from the same ontological perspectives. Death Physical death is the complete cessation of relevant biological functioning which enables a human being to exist as an embodied and material individual in the visible social world. Within the context of the study, death is contextualised as a transitional life event which enables the material body to be put off. This putting-off enables the now disembodied and non- material individual to exist post-mortem in non-material form. Disembodied, The Within the context of the study, the disembodied constitute those individuals who as the result of undergoing their own subjective death-event subsequently exist as non-material individuals in non-material reality. Embodied, The Within the context of the study, the embodied constitute those individuals who exist in material form, who live life in the materiality of the visible social, cultural and material world, and who are otherwise known as “human beings”. Embodiment is “the mode by which human beings practically engage with and apprehend the world” (Abercrombie, Hill & Turner, 2006, p. 128). Thus an embodied individual is one who exists as a material being in the material world whereby life is experienced in ways “profoundly influenced by social processes and shaped by particular social contexts” (Howson, 2005, p. 12). Material Reality Within the context of the study, material reality is utilised as a collective term which encompasses all aspects of the space- 8 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g time world. This space-time world, which is observable, is delineated by flowing linear time in which human beings dwell and exist as embodied individuals. This observable and scientifically measurable space-time world includes for example planet Earth and its geographical phenomena, the galaxy in which the planet is located, the Milky Way, its astronomical phenomena and the expanding universe itself. It is the space- time world in its entirety. Material reality is known and experienced via the human sense organs of sight, sound, taste, smell and touch. Non-material Reality Within the context of the study, non-material reality is utilised as a collective term for a specific locale and for the phenomena originating from that locale. This locale and its phenomena co-exists with the space-time world and though at times interpenetrates it, exists outside of flowing linear time and is not sequenced by time-regulated events. Permanent entry into non-material reality, in contrast to brief encounters resulting from near-death events or alternate out-of-body experiences, is affected when an embodied individual undergoes their own subjective death-event. Psychospiritual Within the context of the study, the term psychospiritual represents the interconnected systems-relationship between an individual and the growth of their emotional, psychological and spiritual selves. This systems-relationship exists in relation to, and is intersubjective with, varying influences occurring within the individual’s visible social and cultural world and their life- cycle. Accordingly the individual perceives crisis events as opportunities for self-growth and growing spiritual understanding and/or emergence. The term psychospiritual is 9 | Pag e W a y s o f B e i n g

Description:
researcher today may need a paintbox as well as a tape-recorder! For other respondents, poetry may be . “remains”, in his twelve volume work, Arcana Coelestia (1976, p. 285). Maslow termed these and each relevant audio-tape recording, including those completed by the professional transcriber.
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.