How Can Adults Help Children Who Have Lost a Loved One?

Aug 30, 2021 at 01:47 am by pj


 

 

Tavares – When someone loses a loved one, the person can experience a variety of intense feelings. The emotions can be consuming and even overwhelming to the point it affects everyday life.

Through life experience, an adult may recognize that the range of feelings are due to grief. But for a child, the loss of a loved one may be confusing and overwhelming.

Children grieve differently from adults; they are much more sensitive to the energy that encompasses their environment. In fact, kids can be highly perceptive, often knowing a lot more about the death than adults think they do.

“Parents and caregivers often ask me, ‘what’s the best way to talk to my child about death?’” said Kristen Nardolillo, LCSW, Cornerstone Hospice Children’s Bereavement Counselor. “The answer is that there is not just one right way to have the conversation.”

National Grief Awareness Day is intended to raise awareness to the numerous ways individuals cope with loss. Due to the recent pandemic, more children may have been touched by a greater sense of grief.

These suggestions for helping children may be of comfort to adults, too:

 

 

Nardolillo advises to remember that kids can only experience small doses of intense emotion, which means they may not react to grief the same way an adult would. Don’t be overly concerned if a child’s grief looks and sounds different from your own. Grief is something everyone experiences at some point, and all will express grief in our own unique way.

Providing a loving, non-judgmental environment for your child, will allow him/her to feel comfortable when they are ready to talk about their grief. Be patient and don’t expect that you will have all the answers.

Cornerstone Hospice offers bereavement support for children and adults living in the communities it serves. Participation is free and the lost loved one did not have to be in Cornerstone’s care. To learn more about group and individual bereavement support, email bereavement@cshospice.org or call 866-742-6655.

Additional resources to help with grief or stress and anxiety can be found at Cornerstone’s Kids, which offers a series of activities including games, music, workshops, crafts and more.  Participation in Cornerstone’s Kids is also free and information is available at http://cornerstoneskids.org.

 

Cornerstone Hospice is a leading community-owned provider of end-of-life care in Central Florida and North Georgia. For over 37 years Cornerstone has set the standard for hospice care as we serve more than 7,000 people each year in Lake, Sumter, Orange, Osceola, Polk, Hardee and Highlands counties in Florida and Cherokee, Cobb, Coweta, Fayette, Forsyth, Fulton, Gwinnett, and Hall counties in Georgia. For more information, to donate, or to volunteer, call 866-742-6655 or visit www.CornerstoneHospice.org.

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