I’m sorry that you/your friend/family/human is going through this. Grief is a universal experience, but not one that we’re trained to talk about (in the US, that is). I was watching the movie Coco with my partner right when it came out, and he reacted super strongly: “why didn’t we learn about death like this?”. My reaction was…. I did. There are some strong traditions in the SW US / Atzlán / México that guide my experience.
- If you’re close enough to know that they’re grieving, acknowledge it. Something as simple as “I’m sorry things are hard right now” is worth so much.
- In a social situation, ask about the person they’ve lost. So often, people don’t know what to say when a loved one dies, and so they say nothing, making the grieving person feel isolated and like they can’t say anything. So, ask.
- Listen to the stories. Share the love they had for this person back to them.
- Are you close enough to bring food? Then bring food.
- If you’re a close friend (emotionally and physically)- say things like
- I’m going to the grocery tomorrow. Send me a list and I’ll get yours while I get mine.
- Can I come over sometime this week and do your laundry?
- Keep doing these things. Check in especially at 6 months, 9 months, and a year after the loss- there is often a lot of attention at first, and then it tapers off.
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