Your grief is unique. Nobody has ever grieved like you are doing, so this is a guide to support you in your journey, not a method for you to follow. If you are reading this because you are grieving a loss, then most likely a person close to you has died. However, this book can ...
If you’re new to grieving, it might feel strange to actively seek out the same pain on hundreds of pages. But grief is a collective experience. Every person on the planet will go through it at some point. And one of the biggest lessons I’ve learned about grieving is that we’re ho...
Newman’s delicate perspective onRemembering Ethanshows the heartbreaking impact of the loss of a sibling on a younger child. Sarah tries to cope with the death of her big brother with little support from her grieving parents. The story is told from Sarah’s viewpoint, which is quite powerfu...
Between these covers lurk the spectres of grief, loss, and loneliness: a man discovers he is far from alone in his empty home, a forlorn wife is gifted with an unusual child, a contractor contemplates the sad message left by a grieving father, a blind woman discovers a spiritual ...
is her struggle to bond with a sick, grieving baby while in a foreign country during political unrest-followed, upon her return to the U.S., by a devastating loss and a career crisis. Nancy McCabe's creative nonfiction has won a Pushcart Prize and been listed in Best American Essays ...
the centre of their world. The father Graham is still grieving, bewildered, struggling to cope with running a business and trying to look after his children, eight-year-old twins, Chloe and Charlie.That “something drastic”; the situation that would completely change the characteristic of this...
Denis returns to his hometown and teams up with Matt. But visiting for too long has painful consequences for Denis, and Matt’s renewed interest in his brother’s passing is driving a wedge between his still-grieving parents. Can the two boys solve the mystery of Denis’s death without bre...
Gorman addressed a country grieving the losses of theCOVID-19pandemic, shaken byGeorge Floyd’s murder in 2020, and reeling over theCapitol insurrectiona few weeks prior to the inauguration. These events exposed how division sowed violence, inaction, anddiscrimination. She rallied listeners not only...
how to talk to them about death; how to recognize if they are grieving 'normally'; how to create open communication and dialogue; etc. When we ask adults what they need in their grief, often their first response is what they need for their children. We have number of articles on WYG ...
The usage of family audiobooks as a legacy for grieving children — an exploratory quantitative analysis among terminally ill parents and close personsdoi:10.1007/s00520-024-08945-xTerminally ill parentDependent children under the age of 18