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Losing your job, finding yourself

Knowing why the loss of a job makes us feel so awful is key to understanding how to deal with it. Research into the topic has shown that the emotional turmoil we experience when losing a job creates the same grief as losing a loved one.

These would include denial and isolation, anger, bargaining, hope, depression and acceptance, as laid out in the psychological “five stages of grief” model. Having a job is an essential part of a person’s development, and finding yourself unemployed triggers a process of personal and social adjustment. According to a Swedish study, people see work as the basis for belonging. Losing a job affects their social lives and because of financial changes, their spending habits.

They also found that feelings of isolation, loss of self-esteem and hopelessness, which in turn affected their physical wellbeing, were significant in those who had become unemployed. Older people experience this process more intensely, as do those with dependents relying on their income. Researchers concluded that this was related to their concept of how employable they were and the pressure they were under to provide.

Six ways to survive and thrive

Job loss is a challenge, but it’s not an insurmountable one. In fact, according to an article in Human Resource Management Review, “The struggle with the trauma of job loss can generate new self-meanings and foster stronger, more authentic and independent selves”.

But how do you do it? Here are six strategies to survive and thrive:

Disclaimer: This article was written before the global Covid-19 crisis and does not take into account the national lockdown restrictions currently in place. Please follow the national regulations, stay safe, stay at home and practise social distancing when you do have to venture out for essentials.