| Making
Memories
Equipping children to manage loss.
by Susan Hagenbach Jones
PARENTGUIDE News November 2007
I recently retired after 30 years of teaching elementary
school children. More than 700 diverse students spent school years with
me, and yet few ever acknowledged losing someone they loved. Occasionally,
a parent would alert me about an upcoming funeral, but, over all those
years, those precious schoolchildren said little about dying.
We live in a culture of dramatic contrast. Tragic events often lead
the evening news. However, little prepares us for when someone we love
is dying. How then do we teach our children that loss is an inevitable
and natural part of life— a part of life that children deserve
to be shown with tenderness and forethought?
Children experience loss differently than adults.
For most children, death is a surprising, unexpected notion. According
to Sue Bailey, elementary school counselor in Norwich, Connecticut:
“Grown ups know we are all going to die. Little kids don’t.
They don’t know they will lose the people they love on their journey.”
A child’s ability to understand the finality of death— and
the family changes that ensue— relates directly to age and emotional
development. The same is true for articulating feelings and expressing
needs. Whatever difficulty we have as adults in sorting out emotions
and putting words to them, the challenge is magnified tenfold in children.
Memories can help a child balance the finality of loss.
There’s something about childhood memories that remains indelible
as we grow older— that shiny new bike, first home run or cherished
puppy. Amid all the memories accumulated over the years, important early
experiences remain clear enough to evoke the emotions that accompanied
them. Simply put, there is power in memories. Power also exists in making
memories, especially in helping children to process the death of a loved
one.
I know firsthand that children instinctively remember comforting aspects
of a loving relationship with someone who is dying. Smiles, scents,
a whistled tune, a lap for reading, the sound of a voice— even
a dozen familiar things you may have never thought were special form
the memories that sustain a lifetime and help fill a child’s void
of a loved one.
Now is never too soon.
I have long believed, memories made with people we love are too crucial
to leave to chance. Becoming deliberate about memories-in-the-making
adds richness to current relationships, as well as comfort in the future.
Free from the grown-up and often-romanticized notion of how things ought
to be, children are particularly good at memory-making because they
are good at being themselves.
Ways to engage your child in memory-making.
Children are already making memories with the people they love. Tapping
into the activities and endearments that shape those relationships helps
comfort children coping with a relative’s terminal illness or
life-changing condition like Alzheimer’s. Children also intuitively
gravitate to favorite ways of expressing themselves. Some children may
prefer drawing. Other children may prefer making things. These natural
inclinations become a logical way for your child to express love for
and communicate with someone who is dying. They also become important
tools to express feelings of loss and grief.
Memory starters to try at home.
•Set aside a story night in which adults and children share favorite
tales. Reverend Patricia Liberty, a former chaplain for Hospice organizations
in Virginia and Rhode Island, reminds us that “Telling a story
helps [us] be less afraid, celebrate each moment and keep loving until
the last breath is drawn.”
•Have a treasure hunt to gather reminders of the relationship—
find cherished photographs, favorite keepsakes and vacation souvenirs.
•Cook a special meal to eat together as a backdrop for sharing
more stories.
•Start simple traditions that encourage conversations about death,
like visiting a local cemetery on Memorial Day or bringing May Day baskets
to terminally ill children in the hospital.
•Give your child crayons and paint to compose an artwork reminding
him or her of a deceased loved one. Some children might prefer creating
a collage with textures and fabrics.
•Write a simple poem or story as a tender and creative outlet.
Younger children can dictate stories and memories to be jotted for them.
With the child’s permission, some of these may be appropriate
for sharing at a memorial.
•Encourage children to read aloud to an ill friend. It can be
something they have written or something they have chosen.
•Provide a microphone and suggest an interview with family members
and friends. The result can be played in a hospital room or over family
supper. If possible, be sure to include stories and reminisces by the
person who is ill.
•If a sibling is terminally ill, creating a coupon book with gifts
of time may be something both children will treasure.
•An often-overlooked source of memory-making is touch, especially
when someone who gave robust hugs becomes fragile looking. Encouraging
your child to hold a hand, gently brush hair or smooth the bed covers
can maintain a precious connection long into the illness.
Begin today.
I recently came across a wonderful quote by Marie José Dhaese:
“Healing from grief is not the process of forgetting— it
is the process of remembering with less pain and more joy.”
Have the courage and creativity to make memories with those you love,
and teach your children to do the same. While the process cannot spare
you from grief, it will give you a way to share the loss with your children
and celebrate the person you all love.
Resources for Parents
•Until We Meet Again (50/50 Publishing), by Susan Jones.
•Talking About Death (a dialogue between parent and child) (Beacon
Press), by E. Grollman.
•When A Parent Has Cancer: A Guide to Caring for Your Children
(Harper Paperbacks), by Wendy Schlessel Harpham, M.D.
•Mama’s Going To Heaven Soon (Augsburg Books), by Kathe
Martin Copeland and Elissa Hudson.
•Children Mourning, Mourning Children (Hospice Foundation of America),
edited by Kenneth Doka.
•www.erinshouse.org, a Web site run by Erin’s House, a nonprofit
organization that can help connect a family with a local grief center.
Silence isn't golden
Grief counselors emphasize the importance of communication between a
child and a loved one facing a terminal illness. They offer this advice:
•Answer a child’s questions in simple and direct ways
•Maintain trust by telling the truth. Never lie to a child to
minimize what is actually happening.
•Follow your child’s lead. Children will let you know if
they want or need more information.
•Children take their emotional cues from the adults around them.
Your own honest, healthy engagement with grief can reassure your child.
Susan Hagenbach Jones lives in Norwich, Connecticut, where she taught
for many years. She credits her dying father for the words that became
the title of her book, Until We Meet Again (50/50 Publishing). Find
it at www.bookofferings.com.
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