The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.

碩士 === 慈濟大學 === 人類發展學系碩士班 === 104 === Bereavement is an inevitable state of suffering that we experience after the loss of a loved one. This period of grief and mourning has not received adequate attention in current medical care, because it is neither a disease nor a diagnosis. As a result, primary...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wen Yung-Sheng, 温勇勝
Other Authors: Peng Rong-Bang
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/85224867938792739323
id ndltd-TW-104TCU00010002
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-TW-104TCU000100022017-06-16T04:28:21Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/85224867938792739323 The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers. 植物的療癒力量:療癒性園藝如何在喪偶者的悲傷調適歷程中展現其作用 Wen Yung-Sheng 温勇勝 碩士 慈濟大學 人類發展學系碩士班 104 Bereavement is an inevitable state of suffering that we experience after the loss of a loved one. This period of grief and mourning has not received adequate attention in current medical care, because it is neither a disease nor a diagnosis. As a result, primary caregivers are often disregarded by practitioners in the health care system, leaving them to cope with the death of a family member on their own. Thus the bereaved face arduous and challenging circumstances of not only having to adjust to their loss, but also dealing with emotional experiences and sentiments that occur in the anguish of bereavement with no one to assuage their agony. They seldom receive understanding from others and are left to suffer the dire consequences of further distress when they are overwhelmed and disabled by their unresolved grief. Humanistic clinic investigates the lived experience of suffering outside the medical diagnostic system, enabling the practitioner to attain a broader sense of comprehension through the exploration and reflection of these experiences. This study approaches the psychological conditions of those who have lost their spouse from this perspective and incorporates therapeutic horticulture into bereavement counseling. The bereaved interacts with the healing elements of nature through plants, garden landscape, and horticultural activities, which leads them to reflect on their own inner experiences and life issues they encounter while caring for and observing the life cycle of a plant, thus aiding their adjustment after loss. The participants in this study were primary caregivers who have recently cared for their spouse during the final stages of a terminal illness until their death. A total of eight counseling sessions (one-hour per session, once a week) consisting of therapeutic horticulture activities were conducted for the purpose of facilitating the grieving process. A qualitative interview was done eventually as a review of the whole experience, and the collected data was analyzed using a phenomenological method. The results of this study indicate that when the bereaved spouse establishes a positive relationship of mutual caring with plants, the length of time spent grieving is curtailed. In addition, due to the many metaphors related to plants within our culture and language, an evocation of these plant metaphors in the bereaved spouse's discourse allows them to make sense of their experiences and gain a new understanding. Plants also empower them to maintain social roles and interpersonal relationships and to secure links with others through social interaction, creating a sense of being cared about. The counselor gives the bereaved spouse a means of expressing grief and sorrow through language, avoiding stagnant woeful sentiments and providing an opportunity for a transfiguration of former experiences and memories. The counselor not only offers emotional support, but also accompanies them as they perceive the life cycle of the plant. Moreover, with the knowledge and skills of gardening, bereaved spouses can also involve themselves in further therapeutic horticulture as plants continue to keep them company after counseling sessions have ended. Peng Rong-Bang 彭榮邦 2015 學位論文 ; thesis 90 zh-TW
collection NDLTD
language zh-TW
format Others
sources NDLTD
description 碩士 === 慈濟大學 === 人類發展學系碩士班 === 104 === Bereavement is an inevitable state of suffering that we experience after the loss of a loved one. This period of grief and mourning has not received adequate attention in current medical care, because it is neither a disease nor a diagnosis. As a result, primary caregivers are often disregarded by practitioners in the health care system, leaving them to cope with the death of a family member on their own. Thus the bereaved face arduous and challenging circumstances of not only having to adjust to their loss, but also dealing with emotional experiences and sentiments that occur in the anguish of bereavement with no one to assuage their agony. They seldom receive understanding from others and are left to suffer the dire consequences of further distress when they are overwhelmed and disabled by their unresolved grief. Humanistic clinic investigates the lived experience of suffering outside the medical diagnostic system, enabling the practitioner to attain a broader sense of comprehension through the exploration and reflection of these experiences. This study approaches the psychological conditions of those who have lost their spouse from this perspective and incorporates therapeutic horticulture into bereavement counseling. The bereaved interacts with the healing elements of nature through plants, garden landscape, and horticultural activities, which leads them to reflect on their own inner experiences and life issues they encounter while caring for and observing the life cycle of a plant, thus aiding their adjustment after loss. The participants in this study were primary caregivers who have recently cared for their spouse during the final stages of a terminal illness until their death. A total of eight counseling sessions (one-hour per session, once a week) consisting of therapeutic horticulture activities were conducted for the purpose of facilitating the grieving process. A qualitative interview was done eventually as a review of the whole experience, and the collected data was analyzed using a phenomenological method. The results of this study indicate that when the bereaved spouse establishes a positive relationship of mutual caring with plants, the length of time spent grieving is curtailed. In addition, due to the many metaphors related to plants within our culture and language, an evocation of these plant metaphors in the bereaved spouse's discourse allows them to make sense of their experiences and gain a new understanding. Plants also empower them to maintain social roles and interpersonal relationships and to secure links with others through social interaction, creating a sense of being cared about. The counselor gives the bereaved spouse a means of expressing grief and sorrow through language, avoiding stagnant woeful sentiments and providing an opportunity for a transfiguration of former experiences and memories. The counselor not only offers emotional support, but also accompanies them as they perceive the life cycle of the plant. Moreover, with the knowledge and skills of gardening, bereaved spouses can also involve themselves in further therapeutic horticulture as plants continue to keep them company after counseling sessions have ended.
author2 Peng Rong-Bang
author_facet Peng Rong-Bang
Wen Yung-Sheng
温勇勝
author Wen Yung-Sheng
温勇勝
spellingShingle Wen Yung-Sheng
温勇勝
The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
author_sort Wen Yung-Sheng
title The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
title_short The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
title_full The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
title_fullStr The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
title_full_unstemmed The healing power of plants: How therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
title_sort healing power of plants: how therapeutic horticulture manifests its effect in the grieving process of widowers.
publishDate 2015
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/85224867938792739323
work_keys_str_mv AT wenyungsheng thehealingpowerofplantshowtherapeutichorticulturemanifestsitseffectinthegrievingprocessofwidowers
AT wēnyǒngshèng thehealingpowerofplantshowtherapeutichorticulturemanifestsitseffectinthegrievingprocessofwidowers
AT wenyungsheng zhíwùdeliáoyùlìliàngliáoyùxìngyuányìrúhézàisàngǒuzhědebēishāngdiàoshìlìchéngzhōngzhǎnxiànqízuòyòng
AT wēnyǒngshèng zhíwùdeliáoyùlìliàngliáoyùxìngyuányìrúhézàisàngǒuzhědebēishāngdiàoshìlìchéngzhōngzhǎnxiànqízuòyòng
AT wenyungsheng healingpowerofplantshowtherapeutichorticulturemanifestsitseffectinthegrievingprocessofwidowers
AT wēnyǒngshèng healingpowerofplantshowtherapeutichorticulturemanifestsitseffectinthegrievingprocessofwidowers
_version_ 1718459758793457664