Article

Ambiguous Loss and Embodied Grief Related to Mexican Migrant Disappearances

Author
Rebecca M. Crocker, Robin C. Reineke, María Elena Ramos Tovar
Publication Year
2021
Region
The Americas
Thematic Area
Families
Topic
Family Needs / Mental Health / Migration / Psychosocial Support

Since the 1990s, thousands of Latin Americans have died or disappeared along the US-Mexico border, following the funneling of migration through remote desert regions. The families of missing migrants face long-term “ambiguous loss,” a lived experience in which a loved one is physically absent but psychologically present. Mexican relatives of the missing in Arizona and Sonora report that these losses produce deep emotional suffering along a timeline – worrying about the crossing, learning of the disappearance, beginning to search, and finally, coping with the long-term impacts of unknowing. Close relatives experience embodied health effects including headaches, insomnia, anxiety, depression, and chronic disease.