Exploring Personal Death Anxiety: Increasing Counselor Competence for Grief and Loss

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Kylie Rogalla-Hafley

Abstract

Personal death anxiety is a universal human experience, and many clients seek counseling as they attempt to find meaning of grief experiences due to loss. Counselors are called to provide congruent, empathetic, unbiased, and unconditional support throughout this process, although sparse, research explores how counselor death anxiety may also enter into the therapeutic relationship. Counselors who work with clients
presenting with grief and loss needs are vulnerable to imposing personal values or risking potential harm to clients if their own worldview surrounding death remains unexplored and unresolved. Humanistic psychology, terror management, post traumatic growth, and the counselor will to meaning all provide theoretical rationale for the exploration of personal death anxiety. Counselor education programs and professional development opportunities are encouraged to introduce didactic and experiential activities for practitioners to explore new ways of conceptualizing death as it affects clients and understanding death as it relates to personal belief held by each counselor.

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How to Cite
Rogalla-Hafley, K. (2018). Exploring Personal Death Anxiety: Increasing Counselor Competence for Grief and Loss. Global Engagement and Transformation, 3(1). Retrieved from https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/joget/article/view/25656
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Articles
Author Biography

Kylie Rogalla-Hafley, Indiana University South Bend

Personal death anxiety is a universal human experience, and many clients seek
counseling as they attempt to find meaning of grief experiences due to loss. Counselors
are called to provide congruent, empathetic, unbiased, and unconditional support
throughout this process, although sparse, research explores how counselor death anxiety
may also enter into the therapeutic relationship. Counselors who work with clients
presenting with grief and loss needs are vulnerable to imposing personal values or risking
potential harm to clients if their own worldview surrounding death remains unexplored
and unresolved. Humanistic psychology, terror management, post traumatic growth, and
the counselor will to meaning all provide theoretical rationale for the exploration of
personal death anxiety. Counselor education programs and professional development
opportunities are encouraged to introduce didactic and experiential activities for
practitioners to explore new ways of conceptualizing death as it affects clients and
understanding death as it relates to personal belief held by each counselor.