TLC Group - Dallas, TX 1995
It's
been said that when a child's brother or sister dies, actually three
people are lost: the sibling and both parents. The sibling
also loses a
friend, playmate, confidant, role model, and lifelong
companion. For
the parents, the loss of a child is often so traumatic
that they have
little left to give to the surviving children. Yet the
surviving sibling
has fears, needs, and anxieties that must be explored
and addressed
if the child is to avoid negative long term consequences.
Listed here
are normal feelings siblings might have concerning the
loss along with
some suggestions on what to do to encourage their expression.
Normal Thoughts
* "Did I cause the death?"
* "Will the rest of my family die?"
* "Who will take care of me now?"
* "I'm all alone now."
* "Half of me died."
* "I'm different from all the other kids."
* "I'm not a child anymore."
* "I feel left out."
* "Things will never be the same again."
* "No one cares about my grief, only about my parent's grief."
* "I can't cry because it will make my parents more upset."
* "I feel guilty to be happy or to laugh."
* "Why wasn't it me?"
* "Will I die young, too?"
* "I made it happen by wishing him dead!"
* "If I act like my sibling, maybe my parents will feel better."
* "Maybe my parents would love me more if I died!"
TLC Group grants anyone the right to use this information without compensation so long as the copy is not used for profit or as training materials in a profit making activity such as workshops, lectures, and seminars, and so long as this paragraph is retained in its entirety.