El Poder Del Duelo Ana Maria Patricia Marquez... Site
At 22, she lost her younger brother in a mountaineering accident in the Andes. At 29, her mother to early-onset Alzheimer’s. At 34, a miscarriage that went unnamed for years because, as she puts it, “we don’t have rituals for what never took its first breath.”
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.” El Poder Del Duelo Ana Maria Patricia Marquez...
“That’s when I understood,” Márquez says. “Grief isn’t about letting go. It’s about finding new ways to hold on.” Today, Márquez leads workshops and retreats across Latin America and the U.S. Latino community. Her approach, documented in her forthcoming book “Duelo Salvaje” (Wild Grief), rests on five pillars: 1. Despatologizar la tristeza (Depathologize sadness) “Sadness is not depression. It is the correct response to loss. We have medicalized mourning. I invite people to be inefficient in their grief.” 2. El cuerpo no olvida Grief lives in the sternum, the throat, the gut. Márquez uses somatic techniques: shaking, breathwork, and what she calls “grief mapping” — drawing where loss physically hurts. 3. Ritual como ancla “Without ritual, grief floats. With ritual, it walks.” She helps clients create personalized altars, goodbye letters, and annual “anniversary ceremonies” that evolve over time. 4. La comunalidad del dolor Inspired by indigenous collectivism, Márquez rejects the privatized grief model. She runs círculos de duelo where participants do not “share advice” but simply witness each other’s tears. 5. Transformación del vínculo The most powerful pillar. “You don’t cut the cord. You weave it into who you are becoming.” III. The Power: From Paralysis to Presence To illustrate el poder del duelo , Márquez shares the story of a client she calls “Elena” (name changed), a woman who lost her 8-year-old daughter to leukemia. At 22, she lost her younger brother in
“I was teaching people to close doors,” she admits. “But grief kept opening windows inside me.” Therapists called it “complicated grief