Most books on loss focus on the "big" losses (death, illness,
divorce) or on specific losses (relationships, jobs, pets, memory
loss, financial loss). Going beyond loss as a problem to be
resolved, a grief to be worked through, Dr. Copeland-Payton
reframes loss from the perspective that our everyday losses
help us learn what we need to handle the major losses.
Weaving in spiritual and archetypal themes, personal and
scriptural story, the author poses that by becoming aware of
what our lesser losses have to teach us, the larger losses of our
lives become not so terrifying.
"When we intentionally enter into our everyday walk through
small losses, the terrain of larger loss and the valley of the
shadow of death is not totally unknown. It is not completely
unfamiliar, alien, terrifying, for we have walked some of this
way before with our lesser losses. We can journey through this
valley of loss, for journey through it we must. And we can
emerge markedly changed, but alive, on the other sid