Q&A – How Parents Can Help Children Deal With Death

Question: We have had several tragic losses in our family in recent years.  My wife died when our children were five, eight, and nine.  I found it very difficult to explain death the them during that time.  Can you offer some guidelines regarding how a parent can help his children cope with the stark reality of death--especially when it strikes within the immediate family?

Answer: Some years ago, I attended a funeral at the Inglewood Cemetery-Mortuary Inglewood, California.  While there, I picked up a brochure written by the president of the mortuary, John M. McKinley.  Mr. McKinley had been in the funeral business for fifteen years before writing this valuable pamphlet entitled "If It Happens To Your Child."  He gave me permission to reproduce the content here in answer to your question.

I knew Tommy's parents because they lived in the neighborhood and attended the same church.  But I knew Tommy especially well because he was one of the liveliest, happiest five-year-olds it had ever been my pleasure to meet.  It was a shock, therefore, when his mother became a client of mine at the death of her husband.

As a doctor must learn to protect himself from the suffering of his patients, so a funeral director must protect himself from grief.  During the course of the average year I come in direct contact with several thousand men and women who have experienced a shattering loss, and if I did not isolate myself from their emotions, my job would be impossible.  But I have not been able to isolate myself from the children.

"I don't know what I would have done if I had not had Tommy," his mother told me when I visited her in her home the morning she called me. "He has been such a little man--hasn't cried, and is doing everything he can to take his daddy's place."  And it was true.  Tommy was standing just as he imagined a man would stand, not crying, and doing his best to take his daddy's place.

I knew it was wrong.  I knew I should tell her so--that Tommy was not a man; that he needed to cry; that he needed comfort probably far more than she.  But I am not a psychologist, and I said nothing.

In the two years since then I have watched Tommy.  The joy has not come back in his face, and it is clear even to my layman's mind that he is an emotionally sick child.  I am sure it began when his mother, unknowingly, made it difficult--impossible--for him to express his grief, and placed on him an obligation he could not fulfill; that of "taking daddy's place."

There have been few examples so clear cut as Tommy's, but I have seen so much that made me wince, and i have been asked so often: "What should I tell Mary?" or Paul, or Jim, that I finally decided to do something about it.  I went to the experts, the men who know how a child should be treated at such moments of tragedy, and I asked them to lay down some guidelines that parents could understand and follow.  I talked to several psychologists and psychiatrists and pediatricians, but principally to Dr. A. I. Duvall, a psychiatrist, and Dr. James Gardner, a child psychologist.  Translated into my layman's language, here is the gist of what I learned:

• When a child, like any other human being, experiences a deeply painful loss, not only should he be permitted to cry; he should be encouraged to cry until the need for tears is gone.  He should be comforted while the tears are flowing, but the words "don't cry" should be stricken from the language.

• The need to cry may be recurrent for several days, or at widening intervals, several months; but when the need is felt, no effort should be made to dam the tears.  Instead, it should be made clear that it is good to cry, and not "babyish," or "sissy" or anything to be ashamed of.

• At times, the child may need to be alone with his grief, and if this feeling comes, it should be respected.  But otherwise physical contact and comfort will be almost as healing as the tears.

• The child should be told the truth; that death is final.  "Mommy has gone on vacation," or "Daddy has gone on a trip" only adds to the confusion and delays the inevitable.  Children--particularly young children--have a very imperfect time sense.  If "Mommy has gone on a vacation," they are going to expect her back this afternoon or tomorrow. And when tomorrow and tomorrow comes and she does not reappear, no only will the hurt be repeated, endlessly, the child will lose faith in the surviving parent just at the time when faith and trust are needed most. It is hard to say "never" when you know it will make the tears flow harder, but it is the kindest word in the long run.

• It is not necessary to explain death to a young child.  It may even be harmful to try.  To the five-year-old, "death" is absence, and explanations may only confuse him.  If he has seen a dead bird or a dead pet, it may be helpful to make a comparison; but the important fact which the child must accept is absence.  If he can be helped to accept the fact that father or mother or brother or sister is gone and will never return, then through questions and observations he will gradually build his own picture of "death" and its meaning.

•A child should not be unduly shielded from the physical appearance and fact of death.  If a father dies, the child should be permitted to see the body, so that with his own eyes he can see the changes, the stillness, the difference between the vital strength which was "daddy" and this inanimate mask which is not "daddy" at all.  Seeing with his own eyes will help.

• A child should be protected, however, from any massed demonstrations of grief, as from a large group of mourners at a funeral. Rather, the child should be taken in privately before the funeral to say goodbye.

• If they child is very young--say two to five or six--great care should be used in explaining death in terms which are meaningful to adults, but which may be very puzzling to children.  For example, to say that "Mommy has gone to Heaven" may make perfect sense to a religious bereaved father, but it may leave a five-year-old wondering why mommy has deserted him.  At that answer, "Heaven" is simply a far place, and he will not be able to understand why his mother stays there instead of coming home to take care of him.

• Along with tears, a child is quite likely to feel sharp resentment, even anger at the dead parent, or the brother or sister who has "gone."  This feeling is the result of the child's conviction that he has been deserted.  If this feeling does arise the child should be permitted to express it freely, just as in the case of tears.

• More common, and frequently more unsettling to a child is its guilt feelings when a death occurs.  If he has been angry at his sister, and the sister dies, he is likely to think it is his fault, that his anger killed her.  Or if his mother dies, and he is not told honestly and simply what has happened, he is likely to believe that his misbehavior drove her away.  Guilt feelings in young children, reinforced by death, can lead to neurotic patterns which last throughout life.

But if a child is encouraged to cry until the need for tears is gone; if he is comforted enough; if he is told the simple truth; if he is permitted to see for himself the difference between death and life; if his resentment or guilt is handled in the same straightforward way as his tears, his sense of loss will still be great, but he will overcome it.

There is a positive side, too.  If death is treated as a natural part of human experience, it is much easier for a loved one to live in memory.  When the initial impact of grief is gone, it is a natural thing to remember and re-tell stories which evoke vivid recollections of the personality and habits which made the loved one a special person.  Children take great delight in this, for in their rich world of imagination they can make the absent one live again.  Such reminiscing does not renew or increase their sorrow.  To the extent that it makes them free to remember, the cause for sorrow is removed.

Mr. McKinley's advice is excellent, as far as it goes.  However, it has not included any references to the Christian message, which provides the only satisfactory answer to death.  Obviously, I disagree with Mr. McKinley's reservations about heaven.  We can say, "Your mother is gone for now, but thank God we'll be together again on the other side!"  How comforting for a grieving child to know that a family reunion will someday occur from which there will never be another separation!  I recommend that Christian parents begin acquainting their children with the gift of eternal life long before they have need of this understanding.

Book: Straight Talk To Men

By Dr. James Dobson

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