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Journal of Loss and Trauma
International Perspectives on Stress & Coping
Volume 22, 2017 - Issue 6
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Original Articles

Further Life Experiences Informing the Death and Adjustment Hypotheses

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Pages 465-471 | Received 23 Jan 2017, Accepted 27 Mar 2017, Published online: 29 Jun 2017
 

ABSTRACT

The meaning of life is never straight to us humans. At different turns of life, we perceive different meanings that are offered to us by our own lives. Near one’s death, professional disaster, enmity, family suffering, and fears for life all have their own dimensions. Nevertheless, when summing up, they seem to revolve around the same central themes again and again. In this article, we tried to offer the insights that we found from some very significant and traumatic events of our own lives through the spectacles of our theory—“Death and Adjustment Hypotheses.” Our life is always important; so is our peace and safety. But when we lose our values, we lose everything. It is often that we try to live through our offspring; however, it is our morality and humane values that can ultimately save them from the traumas of life and see them meaningfully through life and death as transcendental beings.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Mohammad Samir Hossain

Mohammad Samir Hossain and Tahmina Rahman Chowdhury are a married Bangladeshi physician couple living in New Zealand since 2016. Dr. Hossain, known as Samir in his regular life, is best known for his theoretical works on Death and Adjustment Hypotheses. He used to teach psychiatry before he voluntarily retired from the Medical College for Women and Hospital in Dhaka. He is also an Honorary External Faculty at the Palliative Care Service at BSMMU Dhaka. Dr. Chowdhury, officially known as Tahmina, used to concentrate on lifestyle medicine and endocrine health in her professional career in Bangladesh. Both of them are scientific writers.

Tahmina Rahman Chowdhury

Mohammad Samir Hossain and Tahmina Rahman Chowdhury are a married Bangladeshi physician couple living in New Zealand since 2016. Dr. Hossain, known as Samir in his regular life, is best known for his theoretical works on Death and Adjustment Hypotheses. He used to teach psychiatry before he voluntarily retired from the Medical College for Women and Hospital in Dhaka. He is also an Honorary External Faculty at the Palliative Care Service at BSMMU Dhaka. Dr. Chowdhury, officially known as Tahmina, used to concentrate on lifestyle medicine and endocrine health in her professional career in Bangladesh. Both of them are scientific writers.

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