My War

Research Article
  • Inna S. Kovalova independent researcher, Moscow, Russia k_inna@list.ru
How to Cite
Kovalova I.S. My War. Science. Culture. Society. 2016. Vol. 22. No. 4. P. 34-45. (in Russ.).

Abstract

Disease of my country is my pain. Without any permission, war came into the family life, taking away home, native land and support. It filled lives of people with fear of uncertainty, mixed objectives, concealed hope and dragged on in time. The war brought ambivalent phenomena in lives of people. On the one hand, it caused inability to accept individual and common abnormal destruction and, at the same time, creation. On the other hand, this war revealed gratitude and recovery in emptiness and darkness.In emptiness and darkness this war has awaken the feeling of being grateful and healed, extended our perception boundaries of life and death, helplessness and hope no matter what. It gave us a gift to meet people, to know their experiences, full of doom and belief at the same time. It gave us a push to think who we are and what we are doing on our life way.
Keywords:
loss of life's guiding lines and support, fear of unknown, absence of hope, incapability of reality acceptance and humility with it, feeling of temporality, cancer-disease of relationship, destruction and creation, feeling of gratitude, children-orphans, abandoned elderly people, palliative children, love and loneliness, fear of death, “angel” and “saint”, Hospice – concentration of love, meeting with God, hope no matter what

Author Biography

Inna S. Kovalova, independent researcher, Moscow, Russia
Existential psychologist, onco-psychologist, play therapist
Citation Formats
Other cite formats:

APA
Kovalova, I. S. (2016). My War. Science. Culture. Society, 22(4), 34-45. Retrieved from https://journal-scs.ru/index.php/scs/article/view/425