March 11 marks two years since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic. With another variant waning, many people are hoping, yet again, to close the book on COVID and move on. But what if there’s a different way to think about life after loss? Pauline Boss, PhD, author of “The Myth of Closure: Ambiguous Loss in a Time of Pandemic and Change,” talks about what we have learned about grief, resilience and moving on after two years of pandemic life.
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Pauline Boss, PhD
Speaking of Psychology Home Page
Exploring psychology’s colorful past, with Dr. Cathy Faye, PhD
The Holiday Blues, with Elaine Rodino, PhD
Does Diversity Training Work? With Calvin Lai, PhD
Why Gen Z is Feeling So Stressed, with Emma Adam, PhD
How to recognize and combat ‘fake news,’ with Dolores Albarracin, PhD
Will People Accept a COVID-19 Vaccine? With Gretchen Chapman, PhD
What Drives Voter Behavior? With Jon Krosnick, PhD
How to Choose Effective, Science-based Mental Health Apps, with Stephen Schueller, PhD
The Challenges Faced by Women in Leadership with Alice Eagly, PhD
How to Have Meaningful Dialogues Despite Political Differences with Tania Israel, PhD
Survival of the Friendliest with Brian Hare, PhD
Reopening Schools in a Pandemic with Heidi Schweingruber, PhD
Psychedelic Therapy with Roland Griffiths, PhD
The Invisibility of White Privilege with Brian Lowery, PhD
The Challenge of Telework During COVID-19 with Kristen Shockley, PhD
The Psychology of Protest and Activism with Lauren Duncan, PhD
How the Social and Behavioral Sciences Explain Our Reactions to COVID-19 with Jay Van Bavel, PhD
Parenting Through the Pandemic with Erlanger Turner, PhD
Bonus Episode: How to Obtain Teletherapy During the Pandemic with Jared Skillings, PhD
COVID-19 and the Loss of Rituals, Formation of New Ones with Michael Norton, PhD
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