May 15, 2026

Why Grief Isn’t a Lifetime Sentence — Reframing the Healing Journey with Angela Clement

Why Grief Isn’t a Lifetime Sentence — Reframing the Healing Journey with Angela Clement

Click on Fan Mail link and give me feedback. Thanks This episode features Angela Clement, a certified grief coach, speaker, and author, sharing her inspiring journey through grief and healing. We explore the deep emotional process of loss, energy healing, and how to find purpose and joy again after tragedy — essential insights for anyone navigating grief.<|MAIN CONTENT|> Angela introduces her background, including her mission to help people cope with grief after losing her husband and d...

Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconYoutube Music podcast player icon
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconYoutube Music podcast player icon

Click on Fan Mail link and give me feedback. Thanks

This episode features Angela Clement, a certified grief coach, speaker, and author, sharing her inspiring journey through grief and healing. We explore the deep emotional process of loss, energy healing, and how to find purpose and joy again after tragedy — essential insights for anyone navigating grief.<|MAIN CONTENT|>

  • Angela introduces her background, including her mission to help people cope with grief after losing her husband and daughter.
  • Discussion on the unique nature of grief, emphasizing that it is a personal and non-linear process.
  • Angela shares her experience with her daughter's cancer journey, highlighting how support systems and emotional expression are vital yet often lacking.
  • The importance of self-care, emotional release, and creative expression as tools for healing.
  • Introduction to energy healing and its role in emotional recovery, including Donna Eden's routines and brain research on grief.
  • Advice on reframing grief beliefs and understanding it as a natural, healing process rather than a perpetual pain.
  • The difference between mourning (outward expression) and grief (internal process) and engaging in activities like art, music, or nature to facilitate healing.
  • Angela discusses her book, Awakening Through Grief, which combines personal journey, exercises, energy healing techniques, and brain science to assist others.
  • How grief can be a legacy and use of loved ones' values to find purpose.
  • Practical tips on managing emotion triggers, releasing pain, and the importance of community and spiritual faith.
  • The significance of allowing emotions, including crying, and avoiding numbing behaviors such as gambling or drinking.
  • Addressing the myths about grief lasting a lifetime and encouraging hope and resilience through different life stages.
  • The impact of significant life changes, like empty nest syndrome, and identity shifts post-loss.
  • Emphasizing self-care for parents and the availability of resources like grief counselors, coaches, and support groups.
  • Angela’s personal insights into her ongoing healing process, feeling emotions with curiosity, and revisiting positive memories.

Parenting Adult Children Call To Action

Richard Jones. I am an RN with over 34 years of Nursing Experience, much of that experience working with young adults in the corrections system.

Support the show

Social Media Links

https://www.youtube.com/@abcparentingadultchildren

https://www.instagram.com/parentingadultchildren125/

https://www.tiktok.com/@chiefpropellerhead

ABC's of Parenting Adult Children Facebook Page

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61581576308055

r/parentingadultchildren

Feel free to subscribe to these channels and share the links with your social media portals.

SPEAKER_03

We often think of grief as sadness and loss, and sometimes it leads to depression and you know all kinds of really heavy emotions, anger, jealousy, guilt, right? And so it's a reframing of the process that's helping you to heal. And yes, there are these emotions that are associated with it, but really those emotions are coming up to be healed. And so it's not to push them away or try to abandon those and and force yourself to smile over top of them. It's actually embracing those emotions and feeling them and allowing them to move through you so that they can be released.

SPEAKER_01

Welcome to the podcast ABCs of parenting adult children. Please join us as we discuss parenting adult children and the unique struggles that it comes along with.

SPEAKER_00

Today is January the 20th, 2025. It's also Martin Luther King Day, and it's uh inauguration day for Trump 2.0. We won't say any more about that. Our guest speaker is joining us today on our podcast episode. Angela, thank you for joining us today. And uh I want to give you an opportunity to introduce yourself to the listening audience.

SPEAKER_03

Well, thank you for having me. I am uh, as you say, Angela Clement, and I come into this work um because I lost my husband in 2021. And so since then I've been on a mission to help people in grief. And so that's what brings me here to you today.

SPEAKER_00

Awesome. So in your bio, it says certified grief coach, speaker, writer, and healer, creator of the online series Awaken Your Soul's Journey, an author of Awakening Through Grief, a spiritual journey of healing and transformation after loss. So when I read that as I was uh looking at your bio uh and invited you to be a guest on my podcast, I um my wife and I lost a daughter to cancer in 2001. Her name was Jessica Ann, and uh she had two types of uh cancers, and it was a brain tumor that was wrapped around her brain stem. And they told us uh we moved to Charleston, the Charleston area because of MUSC's uh children's hospital, and they did an emergency surgery to remove as much of the mass as they could. I think they got like 95% of it. But when it comes to the brain stem, they can't really get anywhere near that because that's uh caused life-threatening uh consequences. And they told us when she was when she came out of surgery that if she lasted 12 months, we'd be lucky. So she lasted 14 months. So our family walked through uh that process. Uh we spent uh fourteen months going back and forth to MUSC's uh children's hospital and dealing with all of the treatments and side effects and symptoms and all the, you know, I I think Jessica was a real trooper and she probably handled her illness way better than we did. And uh so anyway, yeah, that's why uh one of the reasons when I read your your bio, I was like, oh wow, I wish I'd have known you back in 2001, because just as just as when we have children, you don't get a manual. Uh when you have a child that has cancer, or as or as a child that has um some sort of dehabilitating illness, there's no manual for that. There's no and there's there are no instructions uh that come along with that. And I remember that our church was um, our church family was uh very much aware of her situation. We take her to church in a wheelchair and they they love on her while she was at church, but when she was not in church, everybody was just kind of hands-off and nobody called, nobody came by, nobody said anything. And I know now, looking back, uh that people don't know what to say, you know, unless you've walked through that, unless you've had a a spouse or a and I'm sorry for your your husband, your loss of your husband. I know how terrible it probably was or is, you know, you never get over grief, right? Grief is always with you. It's just uh the only reason I'm able to talk as well about Jessica and her her illness uh is because it's been 20 plus years, right? I mean the first five or ten years, you know, I I I I couldn't talk about it without tearing up. And uh I still to this day can't really talk a whole lot about it because you know it it uh causes triggers and emotions and all of that. So uh that's uh I would like to I I would hope that the listening audience, that the parents in this listening audience, I would hope that and pray that none of them have ever experienced the loss of a child. You never expect to bury one of your children, right? And uh uh so but we have a large audience. We have 1.3,000 members in our Facebook support group, it's a private support group on Facebook, and uh having 1.3 thousand members, uh I can only assume that there might be a couple of parents out there that have walked through that. So I'm gonna quit talking now and let you talk a little bit.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, well, I'm sorry for your loss. I I don't know, you know, I can't possibly understand that kind of loss. But we all know grief in some way, shape, or form. And that's why I feel like, you know, we need each other when we're going through this sort of thing. No matter what kind of grief we're going through, there's similarities in the process. And over the past three years, I've had an opportunity to talk to over 140 people who have walked this path through grief. Oh yeah. Who have been able to really transform their lives through that whole experience. And so my interest is really in helping people understand um the process of grief, first of all, and then what we can do to help ourselves move through that process and to come out um stronger and with meaning and purpose and find the joy and fulfillment in life again. Because that's really what we're what we're seeking, right? Is sure get back to that place again. So yeah, that's that's my mission.

SPEAKER_00

Well, and that's a coming from the position I'm in, uh I appreciate that. And like I said, I wish you would have been around in 2001. Uh because we we didn't even know what resources were available, you know, for parents losing a child to cancer or having a child that had cancer, and and it seemed like most of the um most of the resources were available for the moms, right? Uh because moms are more in tune or in touch with their feelings and their emotions, and um uh a mother's love and a father's love's two different things, right? We both we we we both love our children in unique ways, but we both play different roles in that child's life, right?

SPEAKER_03

Yes, for sure.

SPEAKER_00

So the so the uh the need for acute care, emotional care, especially emotional, spiritual, psychological, mental, uh was more more uh focused on I think the mothers and the and the fathers, not so much. And I tried to I tried to start up a a ministry um something called Father's Refuge way back when. Uh I did what I knew how. I wasn't in touch with social media as I am today. I didn't have a podcast, you know. Yeah, I blogged a little bit, but but uh and I was on Facebook, but I didn't really know how to reach out to fathers, right? And so it never got off the ground for whatever reason. Maybe what it maybe it wasn't meant to be. I don't know. Uh so anyway, um yeah, their your mission and your uh what you're doing. Uh talk a little bit about your book, Awakening Through. I'm trying to read the title over there.

SPEAKER_03

Awakening through grief, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Yeah, talk about your book.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, for sure. So I ended up writing the book. Um it's it's really about my journey. And it's because I have an educator background, I was a teacher and a principal. Um I have included along my journey different things that I use to help me move through my grief. So there's exercises and um a lot of things related to energy healing, because that was something that I learned early on when my son was little. Um, he had a disease called Hirschbrung's disease. And the doctors had a lot of well, they did surgery, but it didn't really help.

SPEAKER_04

Right.

SPEAKER_03

And so they were at a loss of what to do with us. And he was approaching school age and he still was having a lot of trouble, uh, a lot of constipation. And so I, you know, I was panicking because he has to go to school, right? And um, friend mentioned to me, maybe try this energy healer. And so I went to her and she worked with him for a while. Um, I don't know how many sessions it would have been, but in the end, he was healed, and so I always had a fascination with it. I thought, hmm, if that can happen, you know, it seemed like a miracle to me. Um, how what else can happen, right? It was just like, what is this energy healing thing? And I found out through my journey is that you know, we are all energy. And so when I was going through grief, I tried a lot of different things like sound healing. Um, I tried shamanic journeying, I tried uh all kinds of stuff, massage, of course, you know, Tai Chi. I tried all kinds of stuff. Right. And I found uh Donna Eaton's daily energy routine, which is a really practical form of energy healing, um, to be really helpful to me. And so I just kind of branched off from there and started to use that more. So I talk about that more in my book, but I also talk about my journey and the journey through the emotions and how I handled the emotions and also some brain research from Mary Frances O'Connor and how our brain works um as we're going through grief. So there's kind of all ends of the spectrum in that book.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_03

All the things that I tried, and um I include all the things that were helpful to me.

SPEAKER_00

So talk to us about energy healing. I don't think I've ever heard of that.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, so we really what an energy healer does is just hold space for people who um are struggling with some kind of illness or emotional dis ease, we call it. Um and so if you think about when you break your leg, the doctor puts a cast on it.

SPEAKER_04

Right.

SPEAKER_03

And but the doctor doesn't heal your leg. Who heals your leg? You do, right? So your your body is yeah, your body naturally knows what to do.

unknown

Right.

SPEAKER_03

What an energy healer does is just holds that space and helps the energy flow so that your body can do what it needs to do to heal. So it's not actually the energy healer that's doing the healing, it's you, but it's just helping that energy flow in the way it needs to, so that your body can do what it needs to do. And there's lots of different ways and modalities to do that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

I got you.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So when when you say the doctor, they they provide you with a quiet space or an environment that allows you to focus on that energy, or yeah. Is that one interpretation or for sure, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

And anytime that we can put ourselves in a space where we can allow the body to relax and to uh do what it needs to do. Of course, it needs nutrients, you know, there's all of that too, right? But it's like everything is energy and everything needs to flow. And what happens when we have grief is we have these intense emotions. And often what happens is because they are so intense, we tend to push them down. And it's because of the way that we were brought up. Often we were told not to cry, you know, we were told to be strong, we were told not to be angry. And so can you edit this? I don't know what's happening right now.

SPEAKER_00

Can you s can you see the website? I'm trying to share your website.

SPEAKER_03

Yes, yes.

SPEAKER_00

You see us?

SPEAKER_03

Okay, yes, I do.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. So I I just want to share it with l the the uh audience. It's called www.healingenergy.world. And um yeah. So yeah, that's a very uh very nice looking website and and I want the listening audience to be able to find it.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, for sure. Yeah, thanks for sharing that. Yeah. Yeah, and it and I talk about this whole thing in my book, you know, how I came upon all of this and how I moved through the grief.

SPEAKER_00

Cool. All right, well I'm gonna minimize that. And uh I'm trying to get back to my screen. Where where did my screen go? This is one of them. I really have too many. I was like, Yeah, it was Yeah, it was just me playing around.

SPEAKER_03

That's so funny.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, when I get a when I get a chance and people have websites, I like to I like to uh showcase those things so that the listening audience can after they listen to the episode, they can go back to it.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah. And um Yeah, and there's a lot more there than you know I can really touch on in a short interview, but it's basically sharing the things that helped me. And I always tell people, you know what, you might not resonate with everything in there, but sometimes it's just something very small that you hear a message that really can make a huge difference. So, you know, for me it was a quote on Facebook. It was the quote, People will tell you that I grieve for a lifetime. I choose otherwise. I choose the path from hurt to hope to healing every day. And that was a quote by Julie Clough, who became my grief coach, actually. And I know what you're saying, you know, when you talk about you didn't know where to turn when your daughter passed. It's it was really scary for me too. I knew that there were therapists out there, but I had no idea that there was grief coaches. And I thought to myself, what can they say? My husband isn't gonna come back. So what can they say that's could possibly help me, right? Right. And I think a lot of people think that. Um but she made all the difference for me. That's all the only reason why I went to her was because I was feeling so awful and I knew I had to do something.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah. Yeah. And it was scary. I mean, I didn't want to talk to her. It it's it's was scary to think that I would have to cry, maybe, that I would have to give my story.

unknown

Right.

SPEAKER_03

I knew it would be hard. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, it's uh it's never fun to talk about.

SPEAKER_03

No, because we're told that you know, crying is not a good thing. And so we're brought up with that belief, and so we tend to try to push that down. And I found myself every time I cried, it was a volcano because I think because I had pushed those emotions down for so long. Um my coach always says that you know, your emotions are like a beach ball. If you keep holding them under the water, eventually you can't hold it anymore, and it comes up and flies in your face.

SPEAKER_04

Right.

SPEAKER_03

So it's like allowing ourselves to have those emotions and work through that in creative ways. Um, crying is one. Um, writing was another for me. You know, there's but there's all kinds of ways to move that emotion through. So allowing that to happen and not feeling bad about it or guilty about it um really lightens the load and really helps um free up space for that joy to come back in again.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Um, so you've got a lot of material on your biography, which was wonderful. Uh, we'll just work through a couple of them. Uh some of these questions. Um when someone is in the depths of grief, it can be hard to imagine life without that constant pain. What advice do you give to people who feel like they're never going to find joy again after loss?

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, so I thought that too. I really had it was devastating to think that I would feel like that for the rest of my life. And a lot of people told me that, actually. They told me, you know, you'll never get over it. You'll just learn to live with it. And I was on a I was on a mission to try to find somebody who didn't say that.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Right.

SPEAKER_03

So it was really depressing. Um, and that's that's how I found that quote on Facebook, actually. And a fellow by the name of Sean Doyle, he wrote a book called The Sun Still Rises, and it's about losing his wife. And that one was really inspirational to me, too. So after interviewing more than 140 people who have gone through this process and come out on the other side and found joy again and found fulfillment again, I know it can be done. So the advice is not to give up hope to keep moving through. We all have different timelines. Some of us it takes longer than others, and that's okay. But just don't don't give up hope.

SPEAKER_00

So in your book Awakening Through Grief, you discuss grief as a way to release emotions and create space for a new fulfilling life. How can people honor their grief while also moving towards something greater?

SPEAKER_03

Well, for me, um, my husband was a very social man. He loved people and he loved hearing their stories.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_03

I was not naturally like that so much. I really just followed his lead. I enjoyed the conversations he had with people, but I wasn't the one that initiated those. He was. And so when I stepped into this work, I really felt that it gave me a lot of meaning and purpose. It was almost like I'm carrying out his legacy in a way because I'm meeting with all these people. I'm listening to their stories, I'm sharing their stories with others. And so I think when you think about the person that you lost and what they stood for and what was important to them, sometimes you could hang on to some of that and use it really as fuel going forward to help you in your grief.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Hang on to the good memories.

SPEAKER_03

Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah. I know another fellow uh who passed away at home. He was the most kind man Um, humble and kind. And I know his family talked a lot about carrying forward with that humbleness and that kindness in their own lives. So it's it's really about that. And how can you express yourself in a way that's creative to you? You know, we all have gifts and um talents. Sometimes we forget in our life because we get caught up in the I have to get, you know, the house, the car, the job, the money, the whatever. We can lose what we love. Um, but grief sometimes, well quite often, takes you back to who you truly are. And sometimes you end up finding or rekindling those creative endeavors that you have lost. And so it does that too.

SPEAKER_00

So in your experience, the idea that grief lasts a lifetime wasn't comforting, it was discouraging. How can reframing our beliefs about grief help us to navigate the process more gently?

SPEAKER_03

So what I discovered is grief is really a process. And it's a God-given process to help us because we're always changing. And I talked to people about, you know, loss really happened when you left the womb. You know, that was your first big change in life. Um, and then, you know, we lose elementary teachers, we had to give up the bottle, we had to give up the blankie, you know, there was all those things. Right. Over time, um, we've had experience with grief and loss. It's just what sometimes when we have a big, challenging loss like you had, that it really forces us to look at the process more deeply and to really start to think about what's happening. And for me, my understanding is that it's it's a natural process that's given to us and it's uniquely designed for our own grief. And so no two persons' grief journey is the same because no two persons' relationships are the same. And so I really see it as this process that can help us. We often think of grief as you know, sadness and loss, and um sometimes it leads to depression and you know, all kinds of really heavy emotions anger, jealousy, guilt, right? And so it's a reframing of the process that's helping you to heal. And yes, there are these emotions that are associated with it, but really those emotions are coming up to be healed. And so it's not to push them away or try to uh abandon those and and force yourself to smile over top of them, it's actually embracing those emotions and feeling them and allowing them to move through you so that they can be released.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And uh so when you when you initially, you know, when you you lose a loved one, uh there's like you said, there's a whole process that you go through, and the the emotion the emotions are really raw and present, and uh it takes time to work through those things. And um I had a thought a second ago. What was I thinking about? Oh, yeah, one of the things that that because people don't know what to say, sometimes they say stupid stuff or silly stuff that there's you know like one of the one of the things that I that we heard was, you know, well Jessica's been gone for you know whatever the time period is in their mind, six months, a year, two years, five years, whatever. Just get over yourself. Just get over it, you know. And from my vantage point, I don't think you really totally get over that grief. I think you kind of carry it with you, and and I think the raw emotions, um, you know, time is an awesome healer, you know, and over over a period of time, it's been 20 plus years, you know, for us, and and so it enables me to revisit those memories uh with a little more clarity and with uh uh a different perspective. And uh, you know, I can look back on the the positive uh you know, we all leave a legacy behind, and your husband left one, my daughter left one, and and so we we think back on the legacy of what that person has left, and and we can cherish that, you know, and we can carry that with us, you know, through life. Neither one of us are going to forget our spouse or our child. You know, they're always gonna be ever present in our mind. Um so one of the things that I saw, uh, one of the questions was um talk to us about the difference between mourning and grief. Mourning as an M-O-U-R-N-I-G, N I N G.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah. So as I described, grief is really that process that we go through that helps us uh heal from a loss. Mourning is the outward expression of that emotion. And mourning really is how we heal. And there's lots of ways to do that. I mean, in initially, we often will have some kind of memorial service or funeral. That is part of the mourning process.

SPEAKER_00

Celebration of life.

SPEAKER_03

Yes. There, but there's so many more ways to do that. Sure, sure. And and so that was kind of what I was touching on a little bit with uh, you know, using writing maybe as a way, or using art, or using music, or walking in nature, um, exercising, all those ways that we move uh energy, we're moving emotion. Emotion really is energy in motion. And so anytime we can move that, that helps to um get us healing and get us into that space of flow again rather than uh you know, you you it's almost like you can't breathe, right? Like it's like you're holding yourself um so tightly because well and rightfully so. I mean, it's quite a blow to the system, and we want to protect ourselves. So we really almost cower physically. Um so this is this is really releasing that and allowing it to relax and flow again. And it's a practice, you know, it's not something, you know, they say time heals all wounds, but it is really an active practice to move that energy through. Yeah, because we can do all kinds of numbing, right? We can watch TV all day, or we can um, you know, some people turn to gambling or drinking or shopping, or you know, there's all kinds of ways to numb those emotions, right? And again, rightfully so. It's painful. So I get it. Yet the way to really move through that is to start to look at those emotions and start to allow them. And I always encourage people not to do it alone because it can get really intense and dark and right heavy. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, one of the things that the the uh funeral director told me, uh, I went with my pastor uh to go up there and make arrangements. And I was sitting across the desk from him, and he said, he said, Do you realize that 95 or some ridiculous uh percentage, it was a high percentage rate, a high percentage rate of couples wind up in divorce when they lose a child. And uh I was thinking, is this really the time to say that? I probably thought some ugly things too, but I basically just told him, I said, yeah, that's not gonna happen in my family because we go to church, you know, we believe in God and we have a we we're Christ followers and and we have faith in the fact that he is in control of every aspect of our life. You know, and do do we understand everything? No, of course not. But but we we know that that uh He is a He is the uh ultimate healer, you know, of our emotions and ultimate healer of of the pain that we endure. And uh it's like you said earlier, you know, we we all uh experience grief in some fashion as we walk through life. I mean you're gonna lose a job, you can lose a girlfriend, a boyfriend, husband, wife, you know, you go through divorce, you know, you you grieve when your children leave home. We're empty nesters, and our our kids are grown and gone, and and so we had to go through a process of of coming to the realization that, hey, we don't have you know kids, you know, and and so so we have to revisit our marriage, our marriage relationship, and who we are and what's our identity now that our kids are gone. And sometimes we get wrapped up our identity gets wrapped up in our children, and then when they walk out the door, then we're like, hmm, what are we gonna do now? You know, who are you? You're sitting across the breakfast table looking at this person going, I think I remember us getting married, but now now where are we at? You know, we're what are we gonna do now? And uh so yeah, it's uh one of the recurring themes in this podcast is uh self-care for parents.

SPEAKER_02

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

And we hear I read and we read uh all of the you know heart-wrenching messages from moms that are struggling with teenagers and young adults who are walking through addictions and winding up in jail for bad mistakes and you know uh dealing with the uh the struggle of boundaries and just all manner of issues, you know, but but uh so yeah, self-care is is very, very important when it comes to not only us as individuals, but as as mom and dad and husband and wife, and and uh you know, this message can go to you know, young adults need to be aware of these things and be uh because of what you're doing and because of your book, and because of the multitude of brief counselors that are now available probably in person or online. There is uh there are resources available for people to get you know the help that they need, which is awesome. You want to hold up your you want to hold up your book so people can see it?

SPEAKER_04

Sure.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, hold up the the front of it and the back of it. Yay! Awakening through grief, a spiritual journey of healing and transformation after loss. What does it say on the back? Oh wow, cool. And there you are in all your glory.

SPEAKER_03

Yes, thank you.

SPEAKER_00

What's it like to be? How long did it take you to write that?

SPEAKER_03

Actually, I started about June, July of last year, and I finished the manuscript at the end of October. It was a goal because my husband's birthday is on the 27th of October, and so is my mom's birthday. It was the same day. Right. So I made a goal to finish it by that date. And so I did. Then it's just been a lot of editing and oh yeah. How I was gonna publish it.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I bet. Yeah.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So how long how long has your husband been gone?

SPEAKER_03

He passed away in 2021. So August 2021. Yeah. A lot of since then. Yes. Yes, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Four years ago.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, three, yeah, just over three yeah. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So I'm so I'm sure you're you're still working through s uh some of those emotions.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, and what I found is you know, as I worked through them and found my way of releasing that emotion, and now when they come up, it's not such a heavy thing. Like they still feel intense, you know, but I know that I can release them. I know that when they're coming up, they're coming up for a reason, that there's some type of message or healing that's in the emotion. And so I really embrace it with some kind of curiosity, like, whoa, what is this? How come feeling this way? Right. And it helps with life in general. It's not even just so much about the grief anymore. It's like, you know, what other emotions are coming up and what is the source of those, you know, and you're triggered when somebody says something to you and it right, you know, it it's it's um investigating those things. You know, I used to just go, oh, well, you know, it's kind of you know, you'd either get angry and and um ved to somebody or you know, something along that line. And now I'm just much more curious about why that emotion came up and why did I get triggered and what's inside of me that's causing that. Right. And and so it's a totally different approach to life now.

SPEAKER_00

Good. That's awesome. Well, I'm I'm glad that I'm glad that you uh were able to find a a way to manage grief and and all of that. That's that's wonderful. And I'm I'm hopeful that our listening audience uh gets something out of this conversation. And it's they may not get anything out of it today, you know, or maybe it may come back, something may happen in the the future that they're gonna think, oh wow, yeah. Well listen, let me go back and re-listen, revisit that. So I appreciate you being on the podcast episode. And uh congratulations on your book. And um uh do you still have children?

SPEAKER_03

I do. I have two, and actually my daughter is in delivery right now. I may have a grandson soon. Oh my grandson, yes. Oh boy.

SPEAKER_00

I don't know why I asked you if you still have children. I should have said, do you have children?

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, I do. I have two children and I have two grandchildren and one on the way. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So so how did your how older how old were your children when your husband passed?

SPEAKER_03

They were oh boy, good question. Um, well, around their 30 mark. So 28 and oh okay. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So they were young adults.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

How did how did how were they with crossings processing the emotions and the grief of losing their father?

SPEAKER_03

Well, it was tough. It was really tough on them. And especially um you know, my daughter, her husband at the same time was diagnosed with leukemia. And so my husband and her, well, he was a fiance at that time, right? Ended up doing chemotherapy together. Um it was a scary time. It really was. It was um difficult for everybody. And you know, fortunately, my son-in-law has, you know, come through and he's he's in remission, and so we're really happy about that. Um and I did a lot of blogging. I I you know, I did a lot of writing, and I think, you know, my kids read those.

unknown

Right.

SPEAKER_03

I think it it became a form of communication. You know, I didn't realize it at the time, but you know, it was another way to express to them what I was going through and the way I was moving through it. And I think it helped connect us a little bit to have them read those posts and to kind of get an insight onto what was happening with me.

SPEAKER_04

Right.

SPEAKER_03

Then it gave us an opportunity to talk, you know, about what was happening with them. And we mentioned Blaine all the time, we talk about him all the time. And I think we find it quite comforting. And we found new traditions, you know, Christmas and Easter. We've started to create our own uh new traditions now.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Mm-hmm. That's good. That's good.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Well, I'm glad to hear that. Then I appreciate you sharing uh your journey with us. All right, so from a listening audience, I'm gonna say thank you for listening to today's episode. Thank you for the privilege of your time. Uh, you can listen to this podcast on Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, Apple, and Public Radio. On Spotify, you can actually watch the video version of this uh uh podcast episode. And on my uh about page, there should be a link to the website that I've created for this podcast. If you go there and sign up for a membership and leave a uh review on that website, I'd appreciate it. Umtact information. You can click on a link and write me an email. Uh tell me what you what topics or whatever you would like for us to cover on the podcast that you haven't heard that you would like to hear. Um you'll see the upcoming show schedule, and uh again, you can leave a review for the podcast episode. I'd really appreciate that. Having said all of that, I want to say thank you for listening and have a wonderful day. Bye bye.

SPEAKER_02

Please tune in next week for another episode of our podcast on parenting adult children.