Good Inside with Dr. Becky

Helping Kids Through Loss with Grief Expert David Kessler

40 min
Dec 9, 20254 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Dr. Becky interviews grief expert David Kessler about helping children process loss and grief. The episode explores how to talk to kids about death, the importance of witnessing grief rather than fixing it, and how parental modeling of grief impacts children's emotional development.

Insights
  • Children engage in 'magical thinking' during grief, personalizing loss as their fault because it provides an illusion of control—better to feel guilty than helpless in an uncontrollable situation
  • Grief is fundamentally love in another form and a response to unwanted change; the goal is not to fix children's pain but to ensure they don't experience it alone
  • Children are 'puddle jumpers' in grief, moving in and out of pain quickly, unlike adults; they need distraction and the dignity of their own experience rather than constant emotional processing
  • Hard truths told by a loving, trusted adult create safety and connection; avoiding honest conversations about death (especially suicide) erodes trust and increases anxiety
  • Rewriting personal narratives with compassion for others' circumstances—even those who hurt us—is transformative healing work that doesn't erase original pain but adds understanding
Trends
Growing recognition that parental mental load and stress directly impacts children's emotional resilience and grief processing capacityShift from 'fixing' children's emotions to witnessing and validating them as a core parenting competencyIncreased focus on age-appropriate death literacy and grief education in schools and family systemsNormalization of discussing suicide, addiction, and mental illness in family contexts rather than treating as taboo secretsRecognition that children's literal thinking and magical thinking require specific communication strategies distinct from adult grief supportEmphasis on concrete rituals (funerals, memorials, graveside participation) as essential for children's grief processing and understandingUnderstanding that parental avoidance of grief conversations creates anxiety and distrust in children more than honest, uncomfortable dialogue
Topics
Childhood grief and loss processingParent-child communication about deathMagical thinking in childrenFuneral attendance for childrenGrief modeling and intergenerational traumaSuicide disclosure to childrenAttachment and repair in griefMental health stigma and family secretsParental stress and emotional capacityRitual and ceremony in griefAnxiety in children facing mortalityEmotional validation vs. emotional fixingNarrative rewriting and compassionFoster care and adoption griefAddiction and family loss
Companies
Care.com
Mentioned as a platform for finding trusted, background-checked caregivers to reduce parental mental load
Airbnb
Referenced for family trips and change-of-scenery experiences; also discussed co-host network for property management
People
David Kessler
Grief expert and author; discussed his childhood losses, mother's death at 13, and loss of his adopted son David to a...
Dr. Becky
Podcast host; discussed parenting frameworks, attachment theory, and personal experiences with children's grief
Quotes
"Grief is love. Grief is love. It's another form of love."
David KesslerMid-episode
"We would rather be guilty than helpless."
David KesslerEarly-mid episode
"What we run from pursues us and what we face transforms us."
David KesslerRapid-fire section
"You didn't make them cry. They were crying. You became a safe person to cry with."
David KesslerClosing section
"Hard truths told by a loving, trusted adult is actually one of the safest, most connecting experiences we have."
Dr. BeckyMid-episode
Full Transcript
One thing I see over and over with parents is just how much we're carrying. The data backs this up. Most parents spend nearly every waking hour focused on someone else. So if you feel exhausted, stretched thin, or like your brain never really shuts off, that makes complete sense. I've seen how powerful it can be when families have more support. When parents have trusted caregivers, the mental load lightens, and they're actually able to be more present. Not because they're doing more, but because they're not doing it all alone. Care.com makes it easier to find trusted, background-checked caregivers. Whether that's support for a newborn, before or after school help, or even care for an aging parent. You can search by experience, read reviews, and find support in a way that feels safer and more intentional than social media or word of mouth alone. And do you know that you can find activities, camps, and daycare on Care.com too? For a limited time, you can use the code GOOD35 to save 35% on a Care.com premium membership. Because when you have support, you can show up as your best self for the people who need you. You know those weeks in winter when everyone just feels on edge, the dark, the cold, the being cooped up, it all adds up. Kids are arguing, routines are off, and you catch yourself thinking, okay, we might need a reset. Look, nothing fancy or dramatic, just a little break from the norm. When I feel that way, I check out Airbnb. I'll filter for a cozy spot, a living room where we can actually relax, maybe a snowy view, maybe a fireplace if we're lucky. On a recent family trip, that change of scenery made such a difference. Having space to settle in, be together, and step out of our usual routine helped us all reset and breathe a little easier. And something I really appreciate while we're away, we could host our home on Airbnb. So it doesn't sit empty and earns us a little extra income to put toward our next trip. But the thought of handling everything that comes with hosting sounds overwhelming. And that's where Airbnb's co-host network comes in. You can hire a vetted local co-host to help manage everything from check-ins, guest communication, and onsite support, so each stay runs smoothly. It's a simple, practical way to earn some extra income without adding more to your plate. If you're ready to host but want some support, find a co-host at Airbnb.com slash host. As you know, I love talking about emotions, but there's one I don't talk about a lot. And honestly, it's one that I think I have a lot of struggle around, grief. Now, we can easily think no one in my life has died recently, no one's about to die, but here's the thing, we cannot go through life without processing grief. It will happen to all of us, it will happen to our kids. And it's more than just a death in the family. It's shifting stages, it's moving. There's so many ways grief comes up. And what I promise you is my conversation today with David Kessler, one of the world's foremost experts on grief and loss, is going to transform you. It is going to make you feel, it is going to give you visuals that stay with you forever. And I think one of the most powerful things about this conversation is it's going to give you frameworks to understand complicated feelings, maybe before they happen next time. And having those frameworks in you now will change how those experiences end up being processed in your body and how things end up going in your family home. Trust me, this is a conversation you do not want to miss. And you also might want to get a tissue or two ready. I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside. We'll be back right after this. Hi, David. Hi, nice to be here. So happy to have you. So let's just jump right in. We're going to be talking about grief and loss. And I'm a big definitions person, right? I feel like that gives me a framework. And so let's just start with grief. How do you define grief? What brought you to be interested in it? Let's just start there. Okay. I think what brought me to be interested in this, it's not a career that most people choose. It kind of chose me. I grew up with a lot of loss in my childhood from neglect to sexual abuse, addiction. And then when I was 13, my mother was dying. And at the same time she was dying, where we were staying at the hotel, there was a fire and a shooting. It turned out to be one of the first mass shootings in the US. So it was a lot. And I came away from that feeling really damaged and broken. And this life was shot. But luckily I had a neighbor who really sort of gave me a little attention that I needed. And she said, because I dropped out of school, she said, I held. How old? Probably 13, 14. And she said, you know, after a couple of years, I just walked the streets. And she said, you know, you seem kind of smart. You can challenge your high school diploma. So I went back and I did that. Went to community college, started learning about this field, really from my own healing, never thinking it'd be a career. So that's what got me into this. It's just finding my own way through it. And how, when you were younger, how did you see the adults around you? How was grief modeled? Here's not well. The only advice I got was from someone in the hallway of the hospital who said, stay strong, which kind of meant take care of everyone and get rid of your feelings. And the other thing that I think is really surprising is as a child, I thought I was the only one that ever had a parent die. I mean, everyone I knew had parents. So it was me. It was me, like, I must have done something wrong on some level. Absolutely. Absolutely. I think that's key with children, is that we personalize it. We think we did something, you know, we all say challenging things to our parents. So you think, I just would have been better, nicer, more obedient, whatever it was. Yeah. So that's what got me here. There's so many things I want to double click on. One at a time. Let me think if I can hold them in my brain. What you're saying, I think is so important. And just for anyone listening, it's so, it's hard to understand because you're like, wait, I never told my kid that it was their fault that I got sick or that no one says that. I mean, maybe some parents say that. We hope they don't like, you know, it's going to be your fault if I die. That's usually not what people say. And we call that magical thinking. Magical thinking. And I think about it in terms of what's really adaptive. I'm always grounded in evolution. Well, when a kid is overwhelmed by sensation and feeling, right, kids depend on adults for survival, right? And so if an adult gets sick or, you know, dies, a kid is overwhelmed by the feeling of, oh my goodness, one of the people I depend on for everything in this world is not here anymore. They have to try to make sense of that. And if they don't have a safe adult to tell them a story of how to make sense, kids are really left to their own devices. And actually taking in fault, it must be my fault. It sounds like, oh, why would I do that to myself when I was a kid? It's very adaptive because at least it feels like I could be better. There's something in my control. I have some control. 100%. And so it ends up catching up with us later in life. It's usually not adaptive. Absolutely. But for a lot of years. And so I just think that's so powerful to guess magical thinking. But also as a kid, what a crafty thing to try to create a story that actually gives you control back versus the frozenness of, I guess anyone could be taken away from me at any moment without reason. And that's one of the things I always teach. We would rather be guilty than helpless. I just want to let that sit. Yeah. Guilty than helpless. We'd rather have an illusion of control than live in this world where anyone can die any moment. My fault is better than people randomly dying. Think of that as a child. Yeah. There's so many applications of that. But feeling out of control and helpless and like the world is random and anything could happen to you at any moment is kind of like an unlivable scenario. Correct. Right. And I'm always drawn, I think about it in terms of the power of repair and attachment, but it's really relevant here. This powerful Fairburn quote, I don't know if you know it where he says, for kids, it's better to be a sinner in a world ruled by God than to live in a world ruled by the devil. So similar, like I'd rather take fault and badness in than to think I'm kind of a good, relatively helpless kid and the world around me is kind of bad. That's again, kind of unlivable. And I reached out to my father and wanted to talk about grief and he shut it down. Tell me more about that. He just, he didn't know how. He didn't know how. He said, we're not talking about that. You know, your mother's gone. That's it. So luckily, I took it upon myself to learn to understand what had happened to me. Well, I want to ask you two questions at once to answer in either order. I'm curious what you remember that feeling like when it was shut down. And I'm curious your understanding of it now. It felt so isolating. Only me again. I am the only one in this pain. Everyone else seems to be doing okay, but me. And also an important thing with children is I can remember going back to school and it's probably one of the reasons why I ended up dropping out is the teacher in her kindness was in front of everyone. Oh my gosh, everyone. David's mother had died. Da da da. And the thing is kids read that stuff as embarrassment. I was embarrassed. I was the kid who had a mother who died. Now, as adults, we would never think death is embarrassing, but as a child, that's how sometimes we read it. So I always, I do a lot of education around teachers and really making sure that, you know, they understand how to acknowledge things a little more privately rather than making someone stand out who always already feels like they're standing out. Everyone be nice to David today. Be nice to David as mom's died. I'm full of great intentions. Great intentions. And I think part of it I wonder for you is your, your feelings, your sensations were obviously so intense. And we know the feelings intensify as we feel alone. And so in a way, the publicness of it is even worse because it, it calls attention to, to something. First of all, you weren't ready for it, right? So it's like an assault in the moment. And then in some ways you're starting to feel seen publicly for a set of feelings you've been told in your home shouldn't even be there in the first place. So I'm just trying to survive and behave and figure out this new world I'm in. And I think that's what death is and loss you've been thrown onto another planet with no instructions. I think that's true for adults and it's just as, if not more true for children. So getting back to what's my definition of grief, I have two of them. One is, especially when we're talking about death, grief is love. Grief is love. It's another form of love. And the second definition is grief is a change we didn't want. So that could be the divorce, that could be moving, that could be someone, you know, not being the person we thought they would be, all those things. Love and something you didn't want, which the simplicity of those words, it's so interesting. One of the things I share with parents a lot in very minor scenarios compared to death. You show up to the ice cream place and it's closed or, you know, you thought you had soccer practice and it started an hour earlier, right? The simple language of you didn't want this to happen. Correct. Hard stop, zip it, nothing else. It is both so simple and so profound and how like you didn't, like, yeah, that's exactly, that's like kind of the whole essence of my experience is actually that I didn't want that to happen. And that's a really painful experience when we have things in various degrees that we didn't want to happen. And I think the hardest thing for parents is we don't want them to have this pain they're having. So we try to fix and make it okay and we can't. Yeah. Because grief is not being broken. Grief is, you know, this, these feelings that happen to us, that there's, it's feelings to be with not to fix. And, you know, that throws us all for a loop. And something you shared in your story that's so profound is you were feeling so much grief after the loss of your mom. And I think there's this narrative, not only to kids, but to adults, be strong for your son. Right. Be strong for your daughter, right? But if there's a really massive gap, I don't think anyone thinks for a kid who's grieving, you want a parent who is completely melting and can't function, right? There's extremes. But if there's such a big gap, my kid is devastated he lost his mom and I seemingly can just go on and back to work like nothing happened. That, that's actually really disturbing and almost shaming to a kid who's feeling so intensely. Well, and getting back to the simplicity of it, I tell parents, and by the way, when people say, would you rather talk to the child or the parent, I'm always like the parent. Let me work with the parent. So you know that feeling, right? So I always tell parents two things. You have to teach them how to grieve and how to live. Grieving, feel those feelings, and life continues. We're still going to do things. So it informs one of the reasons why I think a parent might have an especially hard time with that. But going back to your dad, do you have an understanding now? It doesn't make it okay, but why your dad reacted like that? Why he didn't want to talk about anything? He was completely overwhelmed. He was completely overwhelmed. It's interesting. One of the things that I did in my own healing was this is as an adult. I went back and rewrote my story as everyone else. So for instance, when I was a kid, the nurses didn't let me see my mother. I had to be 13. I had to be 14. I was only 13. My father didn't want to talk about it, and I felt like my mother abandoned me. So think about this years later when I began to do this work, and I really looked and went, wait a minute, what was it like for those nurses? I realized, oh, it's very nuanced. I bet some of them like those rules. Some of them might have felt bad enforcing them. Some of them might have thought they were doing the right thing. It became really interesting to look at that. And then I got to my father, who I judged, who wasn't there for me. Wait, his wife's dying. He's going to be a parent, and he's never really been a parent. He doesn't know how to do this. He can't pay for his wife's burial. So all of a sudden, the man I had so much judgment for, as an adult, I could find compassion. And my mother, who I thought abandoned me, I was able to realize that's what a child's mind does, abandonment. My mother didn't abandon me. She died. Wow. I'm just sitting with what you said. It's just so powerful and makes me think about whether it's grief or something else, the power of rewriting the story of the people around you. And I think there's another two things are true. When we gain understanding in a different way than we used to have, that doesn't take away from the pain. No. And I know you know that. Both stories exist. That's right. That's right. My childhood story exists, and my adult story exists. That's right. And they're just, they could both be on the shelf. There's no canceling of one another, any of that. No ranking. Right. Yes, I think that's so beautiful. You know, I don't want to distill it down to this, but as you've thought and lived or hungry for so long, are there one, two things that you feel like people really misunderstand about grief? Like they really have one framework and a different framework is more helpful. I think one thing is for children, they're puddle jumpers. They jump into the pain and they jump out. For adults, when we're in grief, if someone came up to us in grief and said, in our like first few weeks, do you want to go to a party? We'd be like, are you kidding? I mean, grief, I can't get to a part. Why would you even ask me? I'd be insulted. Yeah. A child can be an enormous pain. Grandpa died in this moment, and five minutes later, want to go out to play. So I think adults don't realize children, puddle jumpers, in and out of the grief, and they need that distraction. I think the other thing is, as I mentioned, we're fixers. We want to fix. We don't want our kids to be in pain. And it's really, I often try to say to myself, to others, we have to give even our children the dignity of their own experience. So beautiful. And it's so hard when they're in pain. We don't want to give them the dignity of winning the award. We don't want to give them the dignity of their pain. Yeah. And that's hard. It is. I'm a visual person, and sometimes I think logically, order of operations. One of the things I find it's helpful to level with parents about is the pain is there, like come and gone. Like that's there. That's like a fact. So the only real choice we have is what we do next, because I think we get into, I don't want my kid to feel this way. And there's something like, they do feel this way. Oh, I wish they didn't feel, okay, it's already happening, right? It's kind of like the ice cream store is closed. What are we going to do next? We can't make it open. So I think this idea, and your experience really speaks to it, like we, for our kids, no matter what it is, we can't change the hard, but we can change the alone. And I think we focus too much on fixing the hard. The thing we can fix is the alone. Right. And that's what we want to know, just like I felt no one was in this with me, for our parents. And to just like, they're in this with us. I think the other thing is, you know, our kids' pain is so hard, we want to throw a million shiny objects. We want it. Well, let's go to your favorite place. Let's do this. Let's get you out of it. And grief must be witnessed. We need our grief witnessed. Yeah. We need to know someone else sees our pain. Yes, absolutely. You know that moment when your kid is hungry right now, and you're like, okay, what can I grab that's fast? And I actually feel good about, that's why I love Once Upon a Farm. They make delicious organic farm fresh food for kids of all ages with no added sugar or preservatives. And they have so many options, refrigerated pouches, frozen meals, pantry snacks, plus oat and protein bars. So it's easy to find what works for your kid and your day. Once Upon a Farm was founded by parents, and it shows what their real commitment to transparency and doing good for families and the planet. And they're available online and at retailers nationwide. So for your next I need something now moment, use code GOODINSIDE for 40% off your first subscription at Once Upon a Farm Organics dot com. So so much grief and loss in your early years. You became very interested in grief and loss. And then I know you experienced a loss of your own son. Yes, I have two sons. And I adopted my two sons from the LA County adoption foster care system. They'd been in five foster homes. I had the illusion, they were four and five years old when I got them, I had the illusion that love would conquer all. And I forgot how important those first few years were. So I tried my best to overcome that and give them great childhoods. But still, those demons came up from their past when they were in their teenage years. And my younger son, David, died at 21 after really a tough, tough fight with addiction. And he was actually born drug exposed. So that was really brutal to watch, brutal for me, brutal for his brother. It was tough. I'm very sorry for your loss. Thank you. Did being on that side of grief, not your own parent, but your son, did anything, was it a different experience of grief? It was. I was shocked and paralyzed to be in that kind of pain. It's hard for me to, people will go, well, was it different than as your childhood and all that? And it's like, it's just pain. So I don't, I could never figure out which would be worse or all those things. I mean, I certainly, I always feel like the pain we're in is the worst pain. And that was pretty brutal, pretty brutal. Yeah. And it's been nine years now. I have found, you know, joy and happiness. And again, and I try to live in his honor. And partly, really had to do that for his brother. I had to really teach him life goes on no matter what we've been through. And I think the hardest things sometimes for me and for parents is to realize our kids are going to go through loss. If we're going to teach them about staying safe in the road and everything else, we have to teach them about loss. When, how do we do it? When it occurs. When the neighbor dies. When the dog dies. That's our moment to teach. I think that's exactly right. Just when do we teach when it occurs? Like parents here all the time. Grandma's dying of cancer, but my son is three so young. And again, there's like this, we can't ignore reality. Like again, is he young at three? Sure, three is young. Grandma is dying. He sees grandma every week. Now grandma's in the hospital. He hears the word cancer, like grandma's not going to come around soon. So we don't really have a choice. Like in my mind, like it's here. So either he's going to live it alone and confused or we have to figure out the best way to talk to and, you know, a three-year-old about that. Oh, we do have a choice. And sometimes we make choices that are not good ones. I have heard grandma's gone to live somewhere else. Grandpa's gone on a long trip. Yeah. All of those things. And then you've got this young child that just hears grandpa went on a long trip. Wait, wait. And then five years later, we're going to Disney World. Wait, wait, who's going to die? Someone's dying on this trip. That's exactly right. Grandma went to sleep. And then six months later, my kids had a lot of sleep issues. I'm like, I'm going to help connect the dots. Yes. Yes. Oh, there's a reason they've got a little insomnia there. Who wants to go to sleep and die? So I'm reminded of, you know, one of my favorite, you know, things from my kid's childhood where there was, I think it was my oldest was probably in his three or four-year-old preschool class. And they had, it was a gerbil, pet gerbil. And truly, like a week into school, it was pretty early. We got an email from the teacher saying, you know, he was Patty, the gerbil. Patty died. And Patty was very, very old. Parents were like, well, you know, you didn't have to start the year with Patty dying, you know, but here we are. And they did this thing where during the rug discussions, one of the teachers would transcribe the conversation and send it to the parents. And so we kind of had a sense of what's going on in the classroom. And they transcribed the conversation about Patty dying. And it was so interesting. There was a girl in the class, who was one of my son's friends, who had recently gone to her grandparents' burial, the whole graveside, everything, okay? And you heard other kids in the class saying, I think we should write Patty a letter to read. And this girl was like, Patty's in a box in the ground. So I was like, I feel like Patty went on a long trip, you know, like, and you could hear what the kids had been told about death. And this one girl, and I love this girl, was just kind of like going with reality. Like Patty is not going to be able to take our call because Patty's dead and she's a gerbil, right? And you just saw it play out in this transcription. And I do think that kids are expert perceivers of their environments more than us because their life depends on noticing danger. And so they smell inconsistency. They know things don't add up. And that actually can give them so much anxiety, right? And so much panic, because then it's like, well, what else can I trust in the world? What else can happen? Correct. And I'll tell you something parents do a big, big one on is when someone has died by suicide. When someone has died by suicide, we're, as parents, not going to tell them the truth. And my only response to the parents, and I say this gently, I wonder who will, someone is going to, and then they're not going to trust you. That's a hard one. It's the big secret we keep a lot of times, which only adds to the stigma of illnesses of our mind. Yes. I, you know, I often think that hard truths told by a loving, trusted adult is actually one of the safest, most connecting experiences we have. And yeah, there are, and I think this is so intergenerational, like the things nobody was ever honest or put words to for us, we don't really, like your dad didn't have language, my guess is. And so some generation at some point kind of puts their hand up and they're like, I guess it's going to be me, and it's awkward, and it's painful, and you don't get it right, but you kind of pivot every generation. I think after that. All right, I want to ask you a question here. Oh my goodness, I wasn't prepared for this, David. So here's where there's some disagreement in the field. Okay. And I'm all for it. Yeah. There's no one right way to do anything. A lot of people believe we should ask our young children if they want to go to the funeral. Here's my take, and this is where I differ with some. My take is, and parents, when they hear this, they go, I can't force my child. And I go, wait, but you forced them to eat, you forced them to go to school. We force our kids to do things all the time. I say, listen, this is one, a teaching moment. I would say to the children, do you remember how we went to grandpa's birthday party? And we sang happy birthday. Happy birthday is another way we say, I love you. And we're all going to gather one more time for grandpa. And we call that a funeral. And in that goodbye, it's another way we say, I love you. And then I prepare the child for what they were going to see at a funeral and what it's going to be like. And it's interesting, parents sometimes want to go to their five year old, do you want to go to grandpa's funeral? And the problem with that, I love the idea of giving children choices. But what happens is the child says, no, I don't want to go to the funeral, which is their way of saying, I don't want grandpa to be dead. And so we go, okay, mommy, daddy's not going to force you. We're a child at six, seven years old goes, when's his next funeral? I want to go after all. Oh, I didn't inform you it was a once in a lifetime event. You didn't understand that at five. So what are your thoughts on that? Okay, so I think there's probably something in between. So I'm not a big fan of asking kids questions that are adult decisions. That's number one. I'm also not a fan of forcing basically anything except for on the seatbelt in the car. And part of that is I just think there's a better way to be effective. So here's what's in the middle. Because this actually recently came up with my friend, where the couple was a little bit in disagreement about if the kid should go to, you know, the grandparents funeral. And I said to this friend, I was like, look, if you ask your kids, all they're actually feeling is do I want to make mom happy or dad happy? Like, or I think what happens when you ask a kid, first of all, they're like, I have no idea how to answer this question. I don't have enough information. I don't really know what a funeral is. I don't really know the impact going or not going is going to have on me. And so I'm actually just going to try to read what you think. And so I don't actually think they're able to answer the question. It's like a five year old saying what school they want to go to, like the school that gave them the best candy, like they're not equipped to make that decision. Now, I think where I really align with you is I think number one, we tend to think kids can't handle things when they can't handle things. Number two, kids are actually really interested in taking things that are not palpable and making them palpable. Like, if funerals are like, oh, grandpa died and here it is, like die, like what does that mean? Kids find that very confusing. And while as adults, we make something concrete, yes, it brings up this flood of feelings of the reality. For kids especially, it's part of an arc, like they want to have that moment of making it real. And the friend I was talking about ended up taking the kid to the funeral and graveside, like this kid wanted to put dirt on over and over, right? Because I think it was the kids way of saying this is my way of understanding what's happening. So the way I would approach it is first of all, if there's two parents or one, try to get on the same page. You don't want this conversation to be an emerital dispute hidden as a conversation with your kids. That's number one. Number two, I think we can say is there's something called a funeral. Let us explain what that means. And hopefully by then you've already said, grandpa died, death is when the body stops working, no, he won't come to pizza on Sunday. Like they have to, and I think what's also important, kids really need to hear this. I'm not dying, mom's not dying, you're not dying. Kids think, oh, let me tell you, let me tell you, here's the thing, you are so right, but I want to emphasize that that's the dreaded question parents don't want. Are you going to die too someday? And the answer has to be yes. And here's what I'm doing to stay healthy. And this is why I ask you to eat your green beans and all that stuff. But parents, oh, they don't want that question. Yeah. And I think, like, you know, I think, and we can get back to the funeral, but I think when you get that question, something that's also helpful is, and this is true when kids are anxious about anything, instead of diving right into the content, noticing what's happening. Wow, you're a kid who has a lot of big thoughts. You're a kid with a really busy brain. That's a really scary thought. And this is a favorite line of mine. Something you always know about me is I will always give you a truthful answer, even if it's uncomfortable, because I know we can get through hard things together. And so I'm going to answer that question. But you can put a little context that they're kind of asking you the question. And they're also telling you it's kind of scary to be a kid wondering about big things. And I agree, like, you have to be honest and name this is actually one of the hardest things to sit with, that fact. But when a kid, when someone dies in the family, the truth is I will die. But kids don't understand death isn't contagious like a cold or the flu. Like they don't know that inherently. And so they worry when something changes in my environment that affects my stability, like, what else could change, right? There's more. Going to the funeral doesn't mean someone else is going to die. Like they might need to hear that. So going back to the decision, I would lay it all out. I'd say if you believe it's like a helpful thing, here's what it's going to be like. And it's another form of love. And it's helpful to have a moment where we're together. Now, if a kid is like kicking and screaming, right, like, I'm definitely not going to force my kid to go. I just and also part of that is if this is a funeral that's meaningful for me, like, and I know I'm holding like a tantruming young child, like that just doesn't feel like it's a good grieving process for anyone. And that's where I would bring someone trusted, that if just in general, I always say when you're at the funeral, have another trusted person so you can be present in your grief. And you can have because the thing is, when parents are grieving for maybe their parents, you don't remember to say to the kids, let's all go and try to go to the bathroom first because you're in your, you know, and that's why if there's your sister or someone else who like can be a little more in the moment just to help out the kids with their questions. And the other thing is kids are literal. Here's my here's my story about this. There was a woman, her her dad had died, heartbroken, getting ready for the funeral, dressing, her five-year-old comes up. Ami, when do they cut off grandpa's head? And she's like, what? When do they cut off grandpa's head? And mom says, I can't deal with it today. Go downstairs to your dad. Just go downstairs. She goes downstairs. Dad says, what? What's this? Listen, no zombies today. No cutting off heads. You can't go there. Can't do it today. Goes to the funeral, really shut down. After the funeral, they're at the reception. Luckily, the aunt comes up and says to her little five-year-old girl, so honey, I heard you had a question earlier. Yes, but I'm not asking it anymore because it gets me in trouble. She goes, I love your questions. I'd love to hear your question. And she goes, when do they chop off grandpa's head? And she goes, wow, what a great question. Can you tell me more about that question? And the little girl says, yeah, I don't understand a headstone. How do they get the head in the stone? Kids are literal. And they're trying to figure it out. They're trying to figure more than trying to avoid the pain. They're actually trying to develop a story to understand something. And that's where we hopefully come in. Right, right. So I'm a big fan of Leading with the Truth. I think kids are capable of more than we realize. Sometimes we assume kids aren't ready when they are. Funerals can be a very concrete representation of something that without that doesn't live in a concrete way. And that's hard. And I always want to leave room for the fact that you know your family best. And for some kids, it really might not be the right decision. And it doesn't have to be all or nothing. I know a lot of families who then plan a different type of mini-funeral, an event, a memory, gathering, a sharing of pictures and stories. And so, yes. So I guess I'm often usually somewhere in the middle. I know one Sunday school teacher. And by the way, I always defer to the family. Of course. I will give them my opinions, my experience, and then their culture, their family obviously rules. Never our place. So really important, but I know one Sunday school teacher who when the kids are probably about eight or nine, takes them to a small graveyard. They have a little treasure hunt. They figure things out. They got to find the oldest person. They got to find the youngest person. They learn graveyard etiquette. And then when they're about 12, she takes them to the casket room of the local funeral home. Because children find caskets fascinating. And if you can process what a casket is before grandpa's in it, much better. Much better. So I want to end with a couple quick questions. Okay. Almost rapid fire. All right. Ish, ready? You want me to stretch? You're good? Let's go. Let's go for it. Okay. One thing people need to understand about grief is it is forever and you can eventually remember with more love than pain. What's one thing you learned about yourself through a grieving process? How controlling I am and how to have compassion for that control. Is there a phrase, a mantra, simple sentence that you come back to around grief that's helpful to you? What we run from pursues us and what we face transforms us. Mic drop. I'm going to force myself to have some other questions, but that just gave me the chills. What is one thing to try to never say to someone in grief? You know, I have this loss that like, you know, I lost my keys the other day. No comparison. No. Make sure you're at the poker game and throw your loss out there too. Just be with the person who's in grief. What is one thing that's always helpful to do or say to someone in grief? Listen, listen, and love. This is not part of rapid fire, but I have a follow-up. I'm curious. I have found that people around me have lost someone meaningful. Like they light up when I just want to hear more about the person. Is that true for a lot of people? Say their name. Here's the thing. I will say, ask about the person. Now, the thing is, like nuance this, don't ask in the board meeting. Yes. But obviously, you know, ask about the person, the anniversaries, all those things. Sometimes people will say, David, I took your advice and I said their name or I asked and they started crying. I made them cry. And I said, no, you didn't make them cry. They were crying. You became a safe person to cry with. That's beautiful. Okay, last question. If every parent listening could have one idea with them when they think about approaching their kid in a moment of grief, what would that idea be? To think about it like the seasons for every spring, there's a summer, for every summer, there's a fall, for every fall, there's a winter. Everything that lives dies. And we have this wonderful time in between to be with one another. Beautiful. Thank you. Thank you. This is a really moving and impactful conversation. Thank you. This is a conversation that has left me with too many takeaways to even summarize to you right now. And I'm going to allow that to just be true for me because I know I will listen to this over and over. I do want to share the three things that are loudest for me right now. Number one, simply grief is love. Grief is love. Two, what we run from pursues us, what we can face transforms us. Oh my goodness. The visual of that, the pursuit, the being willing, feeling capable enough to face, that is just so profound. And then the third thing, we often think when we're with someone and we say something and they start crying, I made them cry. This is so awkward. What David said will stay with me forever. That person was already crying inside. You just became a safe person, safe relationship, a safe container. So they didn't have to feel alone in that feeling anymore. Let's end the way we always do. Place your feet on the ground. Place a hand on your heart. And let's remind ourselves, even as we struggle on the outside, we remain good inside. I'll see you soon. Okay, parents, quick check in. If your brain feels like it's holding everyone's schedule, except your own, you're not doing it wrong. 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