Lamentations is not grief management

Suffering is an event in which we're particularly vulnerable to grace, able to recognize dimensions in God and depths in the self. To treat it as a problem is to demean the person. The fact that in Lamentations there's no recourse to incantation or magical formulas to secure protection against the effects of divine anger - a common practice in neighboring civilizations - serves as a warning against the acquisition of "techniques” to alleviate suffering.

Lamentations is not grief management.

Nothing, in the long run, does more to demean the person who suffers than to busy oneself in fixing him or her up. And nothing can provide more meaning to suffering than taking the suffering seriously, offering our companionship, and waiting in the dark with that person for the coming of dawn.

Eugene Peterson, Conversations, (p.1259)