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Discover LudwigThe phrase "mitigate grief" is correct and usable in written English
It means to lessen or alleviate the feelings of sorrow or pain caused by a particular situation or event. Example: The support and love from her friends helped to mitigate her grief over the loss of her beloved pet.
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But the Black Lives Matter movement has helped to mitigate her grief, and allowed her to pay homage to a father she says "always provided for us".
Despite his horror at this gesture, he cares for Bee's children, and for the other survivors she has bequeathed him: a failing 15-year-old dog and an ancient mother-in-law who calls herself "the wreck of the Hesperus" but hasn't lost a marble yet — indeed, wishes she could forget, "just a little," to mitigate her own grief.
You can help mitigate and release grief.
Appropriate referral to counseling and support groups and arranging follow up to address possible grief and depression can mitigate the discussion.
The attempt to re-orient death toward life, in order to mitigate the dying anguish and the relatives' grief, is recognizable in the widespread disposition to encourage terminal patients to feed on their expectation of recovery, and to hide or even deny the irreversibility of their disease [ 8, 9].
The fact is, insurance can mitigate some of the problems, but not all of the grief.
If you were feeling kind, you could say that his judgment was impaired by grief, although with young Arnold you do always have to mitigate for a certain amount of common or garden idiocy as well.
Well, a bit Grief, and its consequences ReprintsThe real interest, however, lies in Mr Darling's account of the financial crisis in 2008, and who did what to mitigate its consequences.
You always have to mitigate".
How to mitigate this trend?
Is there anything caregivers can do to, for lack of a better word, mitigate this? — PW, Chicago A. PW, and Debbie in her multipronged question above, ask a question many of us face: how can we prepare ourselves to cope with the enormous loss and grief ahead?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com