Finding simple ways to relax the body might be effective in treating grief after the death of a loved one, according to new University of Arizona research.
The unexpected finding comes from a new study that compared two methods for treating grief: one focused on the mind, the other on the body. The researchers looked at 95 widows and widowers who lost their spouses as recently as six months or within two years of the study beginning.
“What surprised us was that the ability to focus on the body and really relax the body turned out to be incredibly important in helping people adjust,” said Mary-Frances O’Connor, a UArizona associate professor of psychology and senior author of the study.
The research was published this month in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology by O’Connor and lead study author Lindsey Knowles, who did the work as a doctoral candidate in O’Connor’s lab.
One group of study participants was led through a six-week mindfulness training, in which they learned ways to focus their attention on the present moment with kindness and curiosity and let difficult thoughts and emotions come and go without trying to change anything about the experience. Another group went through six weeks of guided sessions on progressive muscle relaxation, in which they learned to relax different groups of muscles in stages to make difficult emotions more tolerable.
“The key difference between the two is mindfulness is just learning how to be with what is, without trying to change it, and bringing a compassionate, nonjudgmental stance to it,” said Knowles, who is now a senior research fellow in the University of Washington School of Medicine and the VA Puget Sound Health Care System. “Progressive muscle relaxation is, ‘How can we help you be in the present moment but make you feel better?'”
A third group of study participants was assigned to a waitlist and did not receive either treatment. Those participants served as the study’s control group—a benchmark to which to compare the progress made by the other groups.
Learning calculus while running a marathon
Knowles, a certified mindfulness meditation facilitator, has long been interested in studying whether mindfulness could be used to address grief. She began working to answer that question when she arrived at O’Connor’s lab in 2013.
O’Connor has spent decades studying grief and its key components, including the craving for a lost loved one to return, which scholars refer to as yearning, and rumination—”the would’ve, could’ve, should’ve” of loss.
“Because the would’ve, could’ve, should’ve have no real answers, you can just spin on those thoughts forever, so it can really get in the way of adapting,” O’Connor said.
These symptoms are stressful not only for the mind, she said, but the body, as well. Researchers have long known that bereavement and loss can lead to physical consequences, such as high blood pressure and even a higher risk of death. Finding suitable methods to address grief poses a unique challenge, O’Connor said, because learning those methods can add to stress.
“We sometimes say grieving is like trying to learn calculus while running a marathon,” she said.
Using three questionnaires and a scale that O’Connor developed during her career of studying grief, the researchers measured whether grief severity, yearning and rumination improved in the mindfulness and relaxation groups compared to the waitlist group. They asked participants to read several statements—for example, “The feeling of wanting them back is so strong it is indescribable”—and indicate how often they feel that way on a five-point scale ranging from “never” to “always.”
Both the mindfulness and muscle relaxation resulted in clear improvements to participants’ grief severity and yearning. But when comparing the groups to each other, researchers found that progressive muscle relaxation was more helpful.
“We were surprised that progressive muscle relaxation outperformed the waitlist group and mindfulness did not,” Knowles said. “That said, it was still excellent that both the mindfulness and progressive muscle relaxation groups showed changes over time in grief severity.”
More effective and more accessible
Another advantage of progressive muscle relaxation is that it is easier to implement than mindfulness training. Knowles noted that, even after years of practicing mindfulness, she’s still learning new ways to improve her own mindfulness practice.
“But progressive muscle relaxation is this simple tool that participants just learned over and over—they practiced it as a group, they practiced it at home,” Knowles said. “In the end, I think one thing we’re pulling from this is that having this clear focus on the body may be more beneficial for folks who are grieving, compared to introducing them to more of this mindfulness toolkit that takes much more time to become an expert in.”
Progressive muscle relaxation also requires no formal training or certification for providers, making it easier to deliver to patients. O’Connor said these findings are particularly relevant amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which has killed more than 600,000 people in the U.S. and has left behind exponentially more people who are now grieving.
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