A recemt conversation with my 7-year-old granddaughter in which she asked me some questions about death made me wonder about just when should we talk to kids about dying?
Do we wait until they ask, or should we start educating them before it touches their own lives in some way first?
Death is an intimidating subject for most parents. Many are uncomfortable with the subject themselves and so they hesitate to bring it up with their children. Maybe they think that talking about death will cause their child to become overly frightened and wonder if their parents, or they, themselves, will be dying anytime soon. The don't want to scare them about death, but they don't want them to be totally at a loss should someone close to them die unexpectedly.
Good books can help parents cope with this part of educating their children long before such a loss occurs. Some such books describe the loss of a pet goldfish or hampster. Others deal with the illness and expected death of a loved one, and still others with the actual death of someone close to a child. Some are written for very young children while others are better suited to elementary school or teenage kids.
If you have children in your home, and the subject of death is a tough one for you to discuss with them, take a look at some good books on the subject and see if they would help in your situation. Don't wait until a sudden death in your family sneaks up and leaves your children unprepared.
Some of my favorites are available at Amazon and are listed below. If none of them appeal to you, check out some of their other offerings until you find one or more that do.
1. Grandpa Bunny is a much-loved Little Golden book that some of your kids may already have on their bookshelf. Even though it is about death, it isn't scary at all, and shows kids that their is a special time for everything, even death.
2. Help Me Say Goodbye is for kids a little older than the Grandpa Bunny book and encourages kids to make pictures and write down short memories of their loved one to keep as a memorial to that person.
3. Tear Soup is for young people but even adults find comfort in this story of making a pot of tear soup. While you are making it, the tears may flow freely, but when you have finished, you put it away for a while, only taking it out from time to time to add a few more tears.
4. Angel Catcher is a journal, but before you say, "I hate writing," check this one out on Amazon. It has lots of readers singing its praises for helping them verbalize their feelings about the person they have lost to death. One girl tells how leading questions the journal asks helped her to say things about her brother that soothed her grief. Several adults commented on how much theyappreciated this book for helping them through their own grief; so much so that they bought extra copies for friends who were also experiencing the loss of someone they loved.
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