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Room for Change is a book to help you get going again after a loss. It gives you practical tips on how to make small changes to your environment that will help you revive after a loss. Simple changes create fresh perspectives and help you get going again. When you lose a loved one, you lose more than that person. You lose a part of yourself. Supporting yourself through the grief process is tough to do, but you’ve got to do it.
From the kitchen to the bedroom, from the car to your return into the world, this book will help you take a fresh look at how your spaces can support and inspire you. Susan W. Reynold’s considerate approach helps you to repurpose and revitatice your surroundings. Whether you are personally grieving or supporting a friend or loved one, this book is a constructive companion for anyone needing to revive after a loss.

“Susan Reynolds has a unique and practical approach that can help you start your engine again after experiencing grief or loss. Making small changes in the physical environment in your home can give you a new perspective on your life. Recovering from grief is about reconnecting with life, and this book can help you do it.
—Les Morgan, President, Growth House, Inc
“Finally, a book that addresses how to adjust to loss after everyone has gone home. Speaking from experience, the author tackles an often unspoken reality that while mourning the loss of a loved one, you can lose a part of yourself. Room for Change is both a guide and companion during times of loss. It contains practical steps for not only honoring the lost but honoring, loving and bringing wholeness to those left behind.”
—Sherry Ransom, author , life reinvention coach, and speaker
“A person’s home is often a reflection of one’s inner self. Room for Change describes how even simple changes in the sounds, smells, and physical arrangement of furnishings in a home can reflect back to the griever’s inner self and bring about powerful, meaningful changes in the grieving process. This book is a valuable tool for grievers, those who support them, and those who counsel them.”
—J. Worth Kilcrease, MBA, MA, LPC, FT, end-of-life and bereavement counselor, certified Fellow in Thanatology, ADEC

