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This book is the book that prepares children for the death of a loved one. What can they expect to see? How do we talk to them? How do we help them get ready? How do they keep their memories alive? It can be read to younger children- the language is appropriate and clear. This book also includes helpful tips for parents and family about how to help children while someone is dying, and how to make their grief process easier. This was written by a former hospice social worker who also provided school based bereavement groups. It's what every family with younger people asks for - it answers their…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book is the book that prepares children for the death of a loved one. What can they expect to see? How do we talk to them? How do we help them get ready? How do they keep their memories alive? It can be read to younger children- the language is appropriate and clear. This book also includes helpful tips for parents and family about how to help children while someone is dying, and how to make their grief process easier. This was written by a former hospice social worker who also provided school based bereavement groups. It's what every family with younger people asks for - it answers their question "What do I say? What is too much?" Children need to learn that death is part of life, and grief is a process that is normal. If we treat the death of a loved one as a part of the cycle of life, and we talk about it openly, children will do better with loss throughout their lives. This is the way to start.
Autorenporträt
Jill Johnson-Young, LCSW, is the CEO and Clinical Director of Central Counseling Services in Riverside, CA. She is a certified Grief Recovery Facilitator, and specializes in grief and loss, dementia, trauma, and adoption issues. She has more than a decade of experience with hospice, including pediatric hospice. She is a speaker at state and national conferences on grief and dementia, and trains therapists and social workers in areas that include correctly treating childhood trauma, grief and loss, and dementia care. She holds a BA from UC Riverside, and her MSW from the University of South Florida. Jill is the creator of Your Path Through Grief, which is a year-long, comprehensive grief support program which has a free therapist page. She is also the author of "Your own path through grief" a workbook for those in the grief process to work toward recovery, which can be used individually, in a group, or with a therapist. She's also the author of the soon to be published book "Don't Grieve like that! How to grieve your way from a rebellious widow." She is a member of the Purple Cities coalition in Riverside and facilitates a dementia support group monthly.