37,596 views
Ivan Capelatto has a master's degree in clinical psychology with a psychoanalytic orientation, is a psychoanalyst at the Santa Fé and Enfance clinics, and is a visiting professor for the family and community medicine course at the Unicamp School of Medical Sciences. He is also a speaker and writer. How is mourning organized? What do medical and psychological societies propose? How can families, schools and professionals be guided on the importance of mourning? Throughout history, human societies, within their cultural diversity, have developed tools to alleviate and understand the pain caused by loss, especially the loss of a loved one. Cults, religious acts, magical thoughts, fetishes and manias have proven effective in supporting the pain and frustration of those who have suffered the pain of loss through death. We know that mourning is a fundamental need to reorganize the life of those who have lost someone. We also know, through masters such as Freud, Winnicott, Melanie Klein, Kubler-Ross and others more present in this 21st century, that the organization of the pain of loss is a protective need for the human psyche. Losses are deliberate, accidental or foreseen absences that, if not elaborated and understood in depth, can generate some neuroses, autoimmune diseases, depressions and even psychoses (when the absence of mourning promotes melancholy). Subscribe to the channel and click on the bell to be notified of news! Follow TV Cultura on social media! Facebook: / tvcultura Twitter: / tvcultura Instagram: / tvcultura Website: https://tvcultura.com.br/ Follow Instituto CPFL Facebook: / institutocpfl Twitter: / cafe_filosofico Website: http://www.institutocpfl.org.br/