El Poder Del Duelo Ana Maria Patricia Marquez... -

For two years, Elena kept her daughter’s room exactly as it was—clothes on the chair, half-colored drawing on the desk. Therapists called it “complicated grief.” Márquez called it “love without a channel.”

Márquez responds bluntly: “I am not romanticizing pain. I am honoring agency. There is a difference between saying ‘your loss is beautiful’ and saying ‘you have the capacity to create meaning after devastation.’” El Poder Del Duelo Ana Maria Patricia Marquez...

This is the core of El Poder del Duelo —the power that emerges not in spite of loss, but through it. Márquez did not choose grief. Grief chose her. For two years, Elena kept her daughter’s room

Elena now leads art therapy for bereaved parents. “That,” Márquez says, “is the power. Grief becomes a bridge to service.” Not everyone agrees with Márquez’s approach. Some traditional therapists call her “too poetic,” warning that reframing grief as “power” risks romanticizing suffering. There is a difference between saying ‘your loss