The Purpose and Meaning of Ritual in the Life of a Bereaved Child

By Vicki Straughan, LMSW

Donna Schuurman, in her book Never the Same: Coming to Terms with the Death of a Parent, states that rituals are ceremonies that help us mark significant events. Rituals of remembrance give meaning to the life that was, as well as the lives that are. Pausing to mourn and remember a loved one gives meaning to the life he or she lived, and the mourners vicariously learn their own lives have meaning.

The way we treat children regarding the rituals following a death sends a message. The message is either: “My relationship was not significant enough to merit saying goodbye, so my life isn’t as significant as others,” or “My relationship is significant enough to merit saying goodbye with others, so my life and relationships are significant.” Ritual is, therefore, for the living…of all ages.

Four issues need to be clarified for young children (Christ, Healing Children’s Grief):

  • The body stops functioning when a person dies.
  • Death is irreversible; the parent or person will not come back.
  • Death is different from what happens on television; dead people do not come back again in reruns.
  • Death has an emotional context: The people who loved the dead person not only feel sad but also angry or afraid.

Including children in rituals such as funerals and memorials gives the children an opportunity to address these issues, perhaps in repetitive questioning. They also have concrete images of disposition of a dead body (unless there is no body as in a memorial service). Without a body, the child still gets to experience the goodbye.

John Bowlby, who developed attachment theory, proposed that even a young child could mourn a dead parent under favorable conditions. They are:

  • A reasonably secure relationship with both parents before the loss.
  • Prompt receipt of accurate information about what had happened (regarding the loss).
  • Encouragement to ask relevant questions.
  • The opportunity to participate in funeral rites (bold mine).
  • And the comforting presence of the surviving parent (and other trusted adults). (Christ, Healing Children’s Grief)

Since mourning is the externalization of grief, it is important to allow children to participate in funeral rituals. Through these ceremonies they can begin to find expression for the internal feelings of grief they are experiencing. Adults are often reluctant to allow children to participate in rituals because they wish to protect children from pain. Children are going to experience pain when a loved one dies, and children would be better served to be prepared for and included in rituals.

Grace Christ found that the “funeral and burial rites provide children with great solace and support if they are prepared in advance and able to participate.” One of the reconciliation needs of mourning is to move toward the pain of the loss. Participation in funeral rituals provides an opportunity for children to move toward the pain they feel. It also allows them to experience it with other loved ones, rather than be isolated from adult support during that time.

The Preschool Child

Children do not actually expect a parent to die even if they are prepared in advance. Participating in the funeral rituals, supervised by a supportive relative or friend, can actually help the child gain a more concrete understanding of the death. They will still ask, “When is Daddy coming home?” They are trying to understand concepts of dead, eternity, etc., with these repeated questions. Grieving adults in the child’s life may interpret these questions as annoying or an expression of the child’s neediness. It is helpful to reassure the adult that the child is trying to make sense of the death.

Giving children a possession of the dead loved one is comforting to them and provides a link to the dead person. Remembering things the child did with the loved one is also a comfort. Some children begin to question if other adults will die, or if they might die. They may develop somatic complaints. Some children regress to a safer time, resulting in changes in sleeping, eating and toilet training.

Older Children

Older children seem to be helped by attending funeral/memorial rituals and observing a large number of people in attendance who cared for their family and the person who died. They report being glad they participated and find pleasure in their reminiscences of the funeral.

Children this age may be encouraged to place an object in the casket. Letters, pictures, teddy bears, drawings, poetry, stones, or baseball cards are just some items that may make their way into a loved one’s casket. Other ways to include children include allowing them to hand out a program or making them honorary pallbearers.

Children six through eight may think the loved one watches over them from heaven, and they will likely talk to the dead loved one. They are likely to ask direct questions and be outspoken. Children this age may express a wish to die themselves. These are expressions of longing and distress, rather than suicidal ideation. These children may want to sleep with a surviving parent because of an increase in separation anxiety.

Children nine through eleven need more time to prepare for a parent’s death than younger children. They need to be kept in the communication loop. These children are old enough to have a role in funeral/memorial rituals. Children this age may resent being overlooked during this time.

Roles these children can take are reading scripture or poetry, acting as a pallbearer, saying a prayer, greeting guests. Some children in this age group may also work hard to appear brave and cover sad feelings. They seem more interested in their own participation in rituals, rather than needing to interact with peers.

Adolescents

Early adolescents (12-14) want to participate in the rituals and then return to their normal schedule as soon as possible. They sometimes feel oppressed by the crowds and having to share family members with visitors. They seem not to want to cry at funerals/memorials and prefer to cry alone in the comfort of their own rooms.

This age group wants to place objects in the caskets of their loved ones, but the objects chosen reflect the personality and interests of the person who died. Some other family members may resent how successful these children are at avoiding or concealing their grief.

Older adolescents (15-17) feel a responsibility to honor the life of their loved one, as well as responsibility for other family members. They want to and do participate in the funeral rituals, including making decisions regarding the funeral/memorial.

The mourning of this age group reflects a similar process to adult mourning. There is a period of numbness before the intense feelings begin. This age group does not seem to place transitional objects in the casket, nor are they as interested in having possessions of the loved one. If it is a parent who has died, this age group mourns what the parent meant to them, as well as what the absence of the parent will mean to them in the future. They have the task of integrating the loss across past, present and future.

Death in the 21st Century

In past decades children were aware of the cycle of life through observations of life and death on farms, or where bodies were brought into the home to await burial. But today’s children can be far removed from death, dying and grief issues. Because of the prolonged life expectancy and reduced child mortality, a person may only experience the death of a family member once every 20 years (Wolfelt, Healing the Bereaved Child). In addition, illnesses and deaths may occur in hospitals or nursing homes, which reduces the likelihood of children witnessing the aging and dying of a loved one.

Our culture is of one of grief-defying, deritualization and mourning avoiding. This attitude can prevent children from developing healthy ways of mourning. Participation in ritual encourages children to move into their grief journeys. The needs of grieving children are to:

  • Acknowledge the reality of the death
  • Move toward the pain of the loss, while being nurtured physically, emotionally, and spiritually
  • Convert the relationship with the person who died from one of presence to one of memory
  • Develop a new self-identity based on a life without the person who died
  • Relate the experience of the death to a context of meaning
  • Experience a continued supportive adult presence in the future

All of the above needs can begin to be addressed through a child’s participation in ritual. Caring adults will understand that this is just the beginning of the child’s grief journey and will work to be present for the child as he/she makes his/her way into the future.


GriefWorks is a free grief support group program for children ages five to eighteen that have experienced the death of someone close to them. We believe restoring a child’s hope after experiencing a death will allow them to have healthy future relationships. At GriefWorks, we provide a safe and loving environment where children and teens can share their stories of loss and explore their grief openly.

Divorced with Children Pt. 2

Read Divorced with Children Pt. 1 on the blog.


For Divorced Parents and Those Ministering to Divorced Parents & Their Families

By: Larry M. Barber, LPC-S, CT

Being the Best Divorced Parent You Can Be:

Realize you cannot do it all:

  • Remember that you are one person. You cannot possibly do everything that both parents in a family do. If your former spouse is uninvolved or absent from the lives of the children, find family members and friends who can be role models of the opposite sex for your child. You cannot be both mother and father to your children.
  • Solicit and accept help from others. As you do accept help, you are helping to build a support system for your family. Find people who have skills and knowledge that you lack.
  • Take advantage of community and church resources.
  • Eliminate unnecessary tasks or activities from you and your children’s schedules. Limit your children’s activities to those which they love most. This includes extracurricular activities for your children such as karate, ballet, art classes, little league, soccer, etc.
  • Live within the limitations of your income. Economize and only use credit cards for real emergencies. Pay off as many of your outstanding debts as you can.
  • Give your children responsibilities around the house that are appropriate for their ages and their abilities. This will help relieve you and give you more time to spend with your children.
  • Learn to say “no” to requests from others at work, at church or in organizations that will take away your time with your children.
  • Lower your expectations. Remember a healthy, Christian family is more important than an immaculately clean house, a shiny car, the best lawn in the neighborhood, etc.
  • Make time for fun with your children.
  • Make time for yourself away from the children. If you are with your children 24/7 with no alone time for yourself, you may begin to resent your children and what you “have to do” for them.
  • Unless your former spouse is endangering the children in some way, make the time they spend with their other parent a positive and accepted part of their child. They need both parents, whether you get along or not. Don’t speak badly about your ex in front of the children or use them as spies to find out “dirt” on your ex.

Place a high priority on meeting your children’s needs:

  • Children need security. Assure your children that you (and your involved ex) plan to be with them for many years to come. Also let them know that there are others who will always be present for them and you.
  • Children want to know their needs will be addressed. Let them know they will be cared for. They will always get what they need.
  • Children need to feel needed. Explain to them that they are an important part of the family.
  • Children sometimes feel guilty. Make sure they know that they are not responsible for the divorce or the changes that continue to follow for your family. When you take out your anger or frustrations on your children, they may feel they are responsible for whatever is going wrong.
  • Children need to trust their parent. Always keep your word.
  • Children like order and predictably. Establish a schedule and try to stick to it. There is security in knowing that there is a schedule, there is order and the rules of the house still apply.
  • Children need to feel they are an important part of the family. Give them chores to do.
  • Children need rituals and routines. Establish family traditions not just on holidays and special occasions, but during the rest of the year. Make a big deal of birthdays and family activities. But don’t end up giving them “things” because of your guilt, your need to show your love, or the need to have their approval.
  • Children need to express themselves and know that they have been heard. Set up scheduled times for communicating with them. Family meals at the dining room table can be a stabilizing factor for your family.
  • When it is appropriate, ask for their opinions and suggestions on family decisions.
  • Set up a family communications center (cork board or dry erase marker board).
  • Children need role models. Being strong for the children is not as important as providing them with role models of how Christian adults deal with life situations (good and bad).

SUCCESSFUL DIVORCED PARENTS:

  • Accept the responsibilities and challenges of single parenting without being overwhelmed by its challenges. They seek solutions rather than complain.
  • Are committed to their families. They try to be the best parent they can be by placing the needs of their children first.
  • Foster open communications with their children. Their children feel safe to talk about any topic or emotion without the fear of being judged or ridiculed.
  • Strive to be as organized and dependable as they can be for their children.
  • Take time to take care of themselves. They understand that they need to be healthy physically, mentally, emotionally, socially, and spiritually in order to be good single parents.
  • Maintain the family traditions as best as they can. They understand that traditions give their children security and meaning in tough times.
  • Have a positive attitude toward parenting and life in general.

KIDWorks is a free support group program for children ages five to eighteen that are experiencing the divorce of their parents. At KIDWorks we believe that children need special help to overcome the losses and changes in their life due to a divorce and that honoring that healing process is a necessary component to maintaining healthy relationships in the future.

Divorced with Children Pt.1

For Divorced Parents and Those Ministering to Divorced Parents & Their Families

By: Larry M. Barber, LPC-S, CT


Divorced Parents in a Two-Parent World

The two-parent world is quickly becoming a single parent world:

  • The number of single parent families in the United States has doubled in the last 25 years.
  • Currently over 16 million children in the U.S. live in single parent homes.
  • The Census Bureau estimates that 59% of U.S. children will spend time in a single parent home during their minor years

The world and the church still often treat single parents as if they are incomplete in some way:

  • “Just one?” This simple greeting from the waitress as you go out to enact alone is an example of the your new reality: Suddenly you are one without a partner in a couples-oriented world.
  • Most activities are still couple or two-parent family oriented (classes, seminars, small groups, sermon series, social activities).
  • Single parents are expected to fit in easily with singles’ activities. People who find themselves single parents have different situations and needs. Divorced or abandoned singles, widowed singles, abandoned or single adoptees do not have a lot in common with never married singles.
  • Society and the church community apply pressure on the single parent to find their soul mate. “Didn’t God say it was not good for a single person to be alone?” (Genesis 2:18)
  • Society and the church community sometimes perpetuate the stigma of the divorced parent as a failure or, at worst, the product of what some still treat as the unforgivable sin.

God has a place and a plan for single parents and their children:

  • God shows his care for a single parent and her son. (Genesis 21:9-21 The story of the handmaiden Hagar and her son Ishmael).
  • God is Father to the fatherless, Nurturer to the motherless and Companion/Comforter/Counselor to the lonely.
  • When God is in lives and in the home, single parent families can be “complete.”

Myths about Children of Divorce:

MYTH: Children who grow up in a household following divorce are more likely to struggle in school, get into trouble with the law, develop serious social problems, and have failed relationship after failed relationship.

FACT: The majority of single parent families have raised well-rounded, successful children. Many negative predictions for children raised by a single divorced parent have more to do with economic hardship than the lack of an intact family and household. With hard work, unconditional love, positive discipline, good parenting skills, faith and a lot of prayer, single parents of divorce can raise capable, content, successful Christian children.

MYTH: Children of divorce will never have healthy relationships themselves.

FACT: Children raised by loving and involved divorced parents seem to put more energy into maintaining their relationships.

MYTH: Children of divorce have lower self-esteem.

FACT: Children of divorce raised in home where they are loved and taught Christian value have a better chance of feeling good about themselves and life in general. The greater incidence of low self esteem in children happens in two-parent and single-parent homes where emotional chaos and/or abuse exist and family members rarely express love for one another.


Be aware of symptoms of dangerous situations for your children:

Self destructive behavior

  • Threats or attempts to commit suicide; cutting themselves (usually requires hospitalization)
  •  Eating disorders (counseling)
  • Shoplifting (counseling)
  • Fast driving and incredible risk-taking (counseling)
  • Physical and violent encounters (counseling, removal from dangerous situations)

Behavior to medicate their pain

  • Drug and alcohol misuse (hospitalization, 12 step program)
  • Promiscuous sexual behavior (counseling)

Clinical depression (may require medication, counseling and/or hospitalization) 

  • Isolation
  • Exhaustion
  • Lethargy
  • Loss of interest in normal activities or achievement (at home or school)
  • Despondency
  • Anxiety and an inability to relax

Read Divorced With Children Pt. 2 on the blog.


KIDWorks is a free support group program for children ages five to eighteen that are experiencing the divorce of their parents. At KIDWorks we believe that children need special help to overcome the losses and changes in their life due to a divorce and that honoring that healing process is a necessary component to maintaining healthy relationships in the future.