Samaritan Announces Grief Support Group Schedule

“Grief is a natural, healthy and universal emotion. It helps us accept a loss and begin to heal. You don’t have to grieve alone,” says Kim Rumaker, Manager of the Samaritan Center for Grief Support.

Grief Spouse4

Samaritan’s grief groups are open to anyone in the community but registration is required at (856) 596-8550. Other Center services include grief counseling for adults and children and PTSD services for active military and veterans.

Understanding Grief (No charge-1 session)
An Overview of the Grief Process

  • One Session
  • January 30, 2014
  • 6:00 – 7:30 PM
  • Marlton 

Pet Loss ($15 – 3 sessions)
Adults grieving the loss of an animal companion

  • 3 Sessions
  • Starting Thursday, February 6
  • 6:00-7:30 PM
  • Marlton

Bereaved Parents ($30 – 6 sessions)
Addressing the life-altering loss of a child

  • 6 Sessions
  • Starting Monday, January 20
  • 6:00 – 7:30 PM
  • Marlton

Grieving the Love of Your Life ($30 – 6 sessions)
For those grieving the loss of a spouse or partner

  • 6 sessions
  • Starting Monday, February 3
  • 2:00 PM – 3:30 PM
  • Marlton

Sharing in Suicide’s Sorrows ($30 – 6 sessions)
Friends and family grieving a suicide death

  • 6 sessions
  • Starting Thursday, February 20
  • 6:00 – 7:30 PM
  • Marlton

 

 

Why Mary Gives to the Samaritan Center for Grief Support

Mary gives to Samaritan so the Center for Grief Support can continue to offer counseling services, support groups and PTSD counseling/family services for veterans. The Center is 100% funded by donations. || DONATE: http://bit.ly/1grVkfZ || FOR MORE INFO: http://bit.ly/1gYjnDC #givingtuesday #unselfie

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Samaritan Offers Coping with the Holidays Free Workshop

Fios1News visited Samaritan yesterday to talk bereavement counselor Mary Parsons about coping with depression at the holidays. We’re offering free workshops for the community. Click to watch her interview! Great job Mary!! http://ow.ly/qEDR5

Embracing Comfort in Time of Loss: The Cosentino Family Story

With the help of Samaritan’s Center for Grief Support,  a loving husband and his two young daughters remember happy family times and stay strong for each other.

Michael Cosentino’s version of “How I Met Your Mother” is the stuff of Hollywood screenplays. While “hanging out” with buddies at TGI Friday’s in 1997, a female friend challenged the painfully shy IT guy to point out the girl he’d like to date “if only he had the nerve to ask.” His friend walked over to the tall blond, broke the ice and introduced them. Michael married Kathy Friel, the love of his life, two years later.

(Click here to watch video interview)

REMEMBERING HAPPY TIMES: (left to right) Olivia, Michael and Katie Cosentino

Life was good. Kathy became a law partner at Shimberg and Friel. She and Michael welcomed daughters Katie and Olivia. But the dream shattered in 2007 when Kathy was diagnosed with an aggressive breast cancer. By October 2010, Dr. Generosa Grana at Cooper recommended the family spend as much time as possible making memories and that they call Samaritan for hospice help.

Bittersweet trips to Washington, DC and Hershey Park followed. Michael says, “Dr. Grana had never steered us wrong, so we made the Samaritan call in November.” Katie and Olivia, now 10 and 7 years old, remember the nice people from Samaritan who came to help take care of their mommy, daddy and them, especially nurse Anna Kitz (whom the girls affectionately dubbed “Anna Banana” with her blessing), bereavement counselor Kathy Kehoe (Miss Kathy K.) and massage therapist Karen Pericles.

Kathy lost her battle three weeks before Christmas at age 41.

Miss Kathy K. continued her visits with Michael and the girls. At her suggestion, he attended Early Endings, Samaritan’s support group for those grieving the loss of a young spouse. “It was so helpful to talk to others in the same boat. The sessions helped us grieve, but also asked us to imagine a more hopeful time five years from now.” Olivia attended Big Hurts, Little Tears, Samaritan’s group for 3-5 year olds. She made a special memory box – an activity that Kathy K. repeated with Katie.

Each girl’s box, decorated with significant colors and stickers, held carefully chosen treasures. “Mommy was a UNC Tarheels fan,” says Katie, explaining her blue-colored choices. Olivia proudly displays the necklace she strung with the words “Olivia” and “Mom,” the preschool graduation card from her mom,and a favorite photo with her mom from a trip to Disney World. From her box, Katie lifts out items to mark the season her mom died – a snowflake cutout, a gingerbread man picture and the memorial card from her mom’s funeral. Each girl shows a crucifix (or “church necklace”) that belonged to her mom – a gift from Kathy’s mother who has helped take care of them all.

For now, the family focuses on supporting each other. Michael says, “The girls keep me moving. I’m grateful and blessed to have them and to see their mother’s traits in each of them – her beauty, her independence, her strength.” The girls, too, appreciate their dad. Says Katie, “Daddy plans his work so he can take us places and come to things like Field Day. We all take care of each other.

Samaritan’s Center for Grief Support offers individual, group and family counseling. For more information, please call (856) 596-8550.

Coping with Grief at the Holidays and Throughout the Year

“The shopping malls were decked out and cheery holiday music blared from every speaker,” wrote the daughter of a hospice patient who died two days before Thanksgiving. “For everyone else, it’s holiday-as-usual. Don’t they know my heart’s been ripped in two?”

Experiencing grief is difficult at any time of year. But for those facing festive holiday celebrations after the loss of a loved one, the season can be especially lonely and difficult to get through.

Nancy Miller and Kathy Clark know that too well. Last December, Nancy’s 34-year-old son Eric Miller died eight short months after his Melanoma diagnosis. Kathy’s mother, Evelyn Packer, died in October 2010, four years after Kathy lost her husband Bill.

Kathy Clark (right) begins a counseling session with Carolyn Fortenberry, MSW, LCSW, Samaritan Center for Grief Support Bereavement Counselor. Kathy’s mother died in October 2010, four years after her husband, Bill. Carolyn has given Nancy helpful tips on how to cope with being alone at the holidays.

Samaritan’s hospice care team supported Eric, Evelyn and Bill during their last months and continued to support Nancy and Kathy after each painful loss.

“It was hard,” said Nancy. “Eric lived with me and worked full-time in the same office so there was no escaping his absence.”  “Even before his death,” she said, “Samaritan Bereavement Counselor Kathy Kehoe, MSSW, LCSW, visited and talked with him. She was there the morning after to console me. The Samaritan team saved my life.”

Taking the Hardest Step - Nancy Miller (pictured) attended the Bereaved Parents workshop, co-facilitated by Bereavement Counselor Kathy Kehoe and Poetry Therapist Alyssa Cummings, that helped grieving parents use poetry to express their feelings. One assignment was to pick lines from a poem that meant something to the writer and expand on it. Nancy’s poem expressed both her pain and her hopeful will to go on. Read poem below.

Nancy and Kathy both coped with a range of emotions as the world around them prepared to celebrate December holidays. “The shock at how quickly Eric’s disease progressed gave way to numbness,” said Nancy. She continued to see Kathy Kehoe in individual counseling sessions and then, in June 2010, took part in a Bereaved Parents support group. This group, open to the public, is just one of the “grief-specific” groups offered by Samaritan throughout the year that is funded entirely through donations.

Kathy also has found both individual sessions with Samaritan Bereavement Counselor Carolyn Fortenberry and grief support groups helpful. Following Bill’s death, she enrolled in a grief group called Grieving the Love of Your Life. “With the facilitator’s guidance,” said Kathy, “We helped each other, supported and talked with each other. It definitely made things better, knowing someone else was going through the same thing.”

Nancy agreed, “It was comforting to know that everyone around that table shared the same kind of loss as me. I appreciate the support of my parents and friends, but this group had a special bond. They just knew, they understood, because they had lived the loss of a child.”

Kathy’s support group stayed in touch and it was a friend from that group who encouraged her to resume counseling sessions after her mother’s passing. “I was having anxiety, heart palpitations, stomach ailments.  My friend said, ‘You can continue to go to the ER, or you can deal with the real cause of your illness.’”

Both women have taken practical tips from their counseling and support groups. Nancy said, “My counselor taught me it’s OK to grieve – that there’s no time limit when I should ‘get over it’ but that I should work toward not ‘doing death’ 24/7.  I now try to limit my crying to 5 to 10 minutes at a time and find it helpful to write down what I’m feeling.”

Kathy said, “I’m still working on finding joy. I try to celebrate Bill’s and my mom’s life. My ‘homework’ from Carolyn has included going out to dinner once a week at a favorite restaurant where the staff knows me so I’m not always alone.”

Kathy, who had always travelled with Bill, her mother and cousin on each holiday, will continue the tradition with her cousin. “It’s easier for me to cope with the holidays when I have someplace to go,” she said.

“The hardest step,” said Nancy, “ is forcing yourself to come into the Center for Grief Support because you know why you’re there and it hurts. But no-one should go through their grief alone.”

COPING WITH THE HOLIDAYS Free Support Group:

In Marlton:
November 1 at 6 p.m.
December 6 at 6 p.m.

In West Deptford:
November 3 at 12 p.m.
November 8 at 12 p.m.

In Cinnaminson:
November 1 at 12 p.m.

Pre-registration is required to attend. For other free support groups or to register, please call (800) 596-8550.

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Nancy’s poem expressed both her pain and her hopeful will to go on:   

To love life,

To love life even when you have no stomach for it.

What an incredible thing to ask.

If you were here, this would not be a problem.

Luckily I have friends that keep me going

— And when I’m not loving life

They understand and try very hard to bring me back.

Everyone misses you

So I’m not alone in my thoughts

And I will try hard to love and live each day for you.