Thesis on Death and Grieving

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Death is part of the circle of life and it's the end of your time on earth; the end of your time with your family and loved ones. Nobody wants to die, leaving their family and missing the good times your loved ones will have once you pass on. In the Mercury Reader, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross “On the Fear of Death” and Joan Didion “Afterlife” from The Year of Magical Thinking” both share common theses on death and grieving. Didion and Kübler-Ross both explain grieving and dealing with death. Steve Jobs commencement speech for Stanford’s graduation ceremony and through personal experience jumps further into death and how I feel about it. Your time is on earth is limited one day you will die and there are many ways of grieving at the death of a loved one. I believe that the fear of death and the death of a loved one will hold you back from living your own life and the fear of your own death is selfish. Everybody grieves at the death of a loved one or close friends differently. The loss of somebody that was close to you is never an easy thing to get over. You never know how long somebody will be in your life. Death has no timetable, and you’ll never know when you or somebody will die. There’s a chance that I might not finish this essay, and theres a chance that I might not have a family, or a chance for me to live my life to the fullest but I have to live my life without letting that hold me back. How does somebody deal with the death of a family member or friend when their relationship ended on a bad note due to an argument? Elisabeth Kübler-Ross compliments matters further when she writes, “A husband and wife may have been fighting for years, but when the partner dies, the survivor will pull his hair, whine and cry louder and beat ... ... middle of paper ... ...h can hold anybody back from living. Griefing is tough and there’s no clear “right” way to grief. Although my grieving for my dad's death wasn't as tough as my family thought, I couldn't tell anybody how to handle death. In conclusion death is the clearing of the old making way of the new and it should not be feared, but more energy should be put in now, while you’re alive and living your life to the fullest. Works Cited Didion, Joan. “Afterlife” From the Year Of Magical Thinking.” Neuleib Cain, and Ruffus 68-87. Jobs, Steve. "Steve Jobs' 2005 Stanford Commencement Address." Online video clip. YouTube. YouTube, 7 Mar. 2008. Web. 31 Mar. 2014. Kübler-Ross, Elisabeth “On the Fear of Death.” Neuleib, Cain, and Ruffus 89-98 Neuleib, Janice, Kathleen Shine Cain, and Stephen Ruffus, eds. Mercury Reader for English 101. Boston: Pearson Learning Solutions, 2013 Print.

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