I am a professor of psychology, Anglican priest and thanatologist who travels in many circles. An outstanding author and therapist has contacted me about the identified issue and is looking for resources. I directed to some and also questioned how to embrace the loss while dealing with any of these additional challenges. I do not know how far the "advance" went.
Thank you.
Fr. Richard B. Gilbert, PhD, CT
1484 N. Academy
Galesburg, IL 61401
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Thank you.
Fr. Richard B. Gilbert, PhD, CT
1484 N. Academy
Galesburg, IL 61401
***this post is edited by moderator *** *** private e-mails not allowed **
Please read our Terms of Use
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I don' t know what precisely the specifics are of the issue you raised: did it mean a widower making advance on their own daughter, or on someone else's daughter?
As you point out, a widower by definition has an issue over loss, and that is one thing.
If the advance is to their own daughter, that is another, and yes, a touch of counselling would no doubt be in order.
If not, then, bizarre as the author and you may find it, it is one adult making an advance on another, and no issue.
As you point out, a widower by definition has an issue over loss, and that is one thing.
If the advance is to their own daughter, that is another, and yes, a touch of counselling would no doubt be in order.
If not, then, bizarre as the author and you may find it, it is one adult making an advance on another, and no issue.
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