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Journal Article

Citation

Kawashima D, Kawano K. Omega (Westport) 2017; 75(4): 360-375.

Affiliation

Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Sage Publications)

DOI

10.1177/0030222816652805

PMID

28792358

Abstract

Although Japan has a high suicide rate, there is insufficient research on the experiences of suicide-bereaved individuals. We investigated the qualitative aspects of the meaning reconstruction process after a loss to suicide. We conducted a life-story interview using open-ended questions with one middle-aged Japanese woman who lost her son to suicide. We used a narrative approach to transcribe and code the participant's narratives for analysis. The analysis revealed three meaning groups that structured the participant's reactions to the suicide: making sense of her son's death and life, relationships with other people, and reconstruction of a bond with the deceased. The belief that death is not an eternal split and that there is a connection between the living and the deceased reduced the pain felt by our participant. Furthermore, the narratives worked as scaffolds in the meaning reconstruction process. We discuss our results in the light of cross-cultural differences in the grieving process.


Language: en

Keywords

bereavement; culture; meaning reconstruction; narrative; suicide

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