Chances are that someone important to your child (grandparents,
aunts, uncles, close friends, or even a parent) will die before
your child reaches adulthood. How can you prepare children for the
likelihood of the death of someone close to them? First, do all
you can to give children a caring, supportive environment. You can
help your child through this difficult time with honesty,
reassurance, and a willingness to talk about and share feelings.
Very Young Children (ages 2 to 4)
Talk to your children about death in a way that they can
understand. Children between ages 2 and 4 react to people not
being with them. Preschool children do not understand that dead
people are gone forever. Stories in books, children's movies, TV
shows, or the death of a pet can all be ways to start talking
about what death means.
The most important thing for children to know is that someone will
always be there to take care of them. Very young children do not
understand time or the future. If your young child asks you if you
will die, the real question she may be asking is "Will you be here
to take care of me?" Reassure your child that you or someone else
who loves her will be always be there. Very young children need
comforting after a death to help them feel secure.
Young Children (ages 5 to 8)
Children between the ages of 5 and 8 are still confused about
death. Your child may think that somehow they caused the death by
wishing it would happen or by not doing what they were told to do.
This "magical thinking" can cause your child to feel unrealistic
guilt. Children need to have honest and complete answers about the
death. Without the whole truth, your child will fill in the
details with self-blame. Some children want to talk about the
death with adults. Others will act out their feelings in play.
Both of these responses are normal.
It is very important that you use clear language when explaining
death to your child. If you try to cushion the news that someone
has died, you may confuse your child. If you tell your child "we
lost Grandpa today", your child will expect that someone will find
Grandpa. If you tell your child "Uncle Joe is just sleeping", your
child will expect Uncle Joe to wake up. While it sounds harsh, the
clear truth is the best language to use because your child will
understand it better.
School-age Children (ages 9 to 12)
School-age children are beginning to understand that death is
final. They are less likely to expect the dead person to return.
School-age children can think about the future more clearly and
understand what it would be like to have someone important to them
die. Explain the ways that your family or community grieves. Is
there a funeral, a wake, a celebration of life? What happens at
these events? What do people do after the funeral? Children are
comforted when they know the routines and customs. Your child may
want to attend these rituals. If you simply and honestly explain
what your child will hear and see before, during, and after the
services, it is OK to bring them to the funeral or other events
related to the death.
Your child may avoid upsetting topics and ideas. Your child may
change the subject or ignore you when you try to talk to them
about death. Look for other opportunities or wait for them to
bring up the topic again. Encourage them to play. Play is the way
children process death and sort out their feelings about it.
Teenagers
As your child becomes a teenager, do not be surprised if he begins
questioning your family's faith and other strongly held beliefs.
At this age, children may be more interested in talking about
death and other abstract topics. Although teenagers know that
everyone will die, they often do not act as if that means them.
Careless with their own health and well-being, many teenagers
still believe deep down, that the rules of death do not apply to
them. However, parents still influence their teens. Most teens
have views on politics, religion, and social issues that are very
close to their parents' views. Don't be afraid to talk about death
and dying with teens. They need to hear what you have to say.
If your teen does not want to talk to you about an important
death, encourage them to talk with another adult such as a
counselor, pastor, teacher, or coach.
Written by Dr. Gay Deitrich-MacLean.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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