Seeing the body or not being able to do so
Some of the people we talked to had seen the body of their friend or relative quite soon after the person had died because the...
Telling children or grandchildren about a death in the family is difficult, especially after a suicide. In 2001, the charity Winston’s Wish published Beyond the Rough Rock: Supporting a Child Who Has Been Bereaved By Suicide, a helpful booklet by Diana Crossley and Julie Stokes.
Crossley and Stokes believe that parents should try to be as honest as possible with their children. In their experience, telling a child that someone has died by suicide may involve 5 stages, which may happen in the space of minutes, hours, days, months or even years. The 5 stages are be:
Some of the people we talked to had very young children or grandchildren when a member of the family died by suicide. Telling the children can be very hard for a recently bereaved partner and some did not do it straight away. Paula asked a friend to look after her 5 year old daughter after school, and could then break the news to her the next day.
If important information is withheld other people may also unwittingly reveal the truth and cause distress. Linda’s daughter Chloe was 13 when she died by suicide. Linda’s other daughter was 10 years old at the time. She did not realise that Chloe had taken her own life. However, she soon found out the details of what had happened from someone else.
Children and grandchildren reacted to the news of a suicide in the family in many different ways. Some appeared shocked, some were hysterical, others violent. When one of Amanda’s teenage sons heard that his brother had died he ran out of the house, leaving her feeling bewildered, hoping that he was safe.
Jacqui went to her children’s school to tell them that their father had died. They were teenagers at the time. They were quiet when they heard the news. The next day she told them that he had died by suicide. Her son said that he was aware of it already. The children had known that their father had had a mental health problem and that he had attempted suicide before. Jacqui wanted to make sure that the children knew that they were not to blame for their father’s suicide.
Patricia told her children about their father’s death when they were at home. A policeman was present. One of Patricia’s teenage children reacted quite violently when he heard what had happened. Looking back Patricia thinks it would have been better if a police officer had broken the news. She thinks her child’s anger might have been directed at the policeman instead of at her.
Some of the people we talked to had seen the body of their friend or relative quite soon after the person had died because the...
{media 33704,33852,33876} Hugs, displays of warmth and expressions of sympathy were often appreciated, though one woman said she had found it "weird" when a woman...