You Are Not Invincible

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Founder’s Story
    • Contributors
  • Get Informed
    • Signs and Symptoms
    • Prevention In Your Area
  • Help Fight Addiction
    • Volunteer and Donate
    • Calendar
  • Blog
  • Contact

Donate to Our Cause

Archives for December 2017

18
December 2017

Anecdote 16: How to behave around someone who lost a child, part one

Anecdotes from Avi

Prev: What to do if you suspect that your child is using drugs, part eleven                    Next: Part two

Introduction

We are starting a new topic and as usual we take no responsibility for the actions you take to help yourself and your children.  The information I share here is true as it relates to my wife and I, our experience and the knowledge I amassed since our son, Ben, passed on.  With that I expect that you apply the information that I share as it best applies to you and your situation.  With that let’s get started.

At times people do not know what to say or how to act and react with a parent who lost a child.  At times people feel that they need to say something “smart” so that the person who lost a child will feel better; sometimes people try to dictate how the person who lost a child should feel; at times people try to put a time limit to mourning; and at times someone needs to do “a one better” by reporting, to the mourning parent(s), about a loss of someone or someones in their lives.  I will try to bring to light the side of the parent who lost a child, something that most folks did not get to experience (and we all hope that they never do) and deal with the question of how to behave and what to say to someone who lost a child.

Nomenclature

A person who lost his parents is an orphan, a woman who lost her husband is a widow, a man who lost his wife is a widower, but a parent who lost a child has no descriptive word in the English language.  In order to talk about the subject without constantly writing the sentence “a parent who lost a child” I will borrow a phrase from Hebrew “bereaved parent” (הורה שכול).

 

Next anecdote: we will discuss: understanding emotions

 

Avi,

The BTFMovement

 

Prev: What to do if you suspect that your child is using drugs, part eleven                   Next: Part two

 

You are not invincible –Stew Birbrower

Together we march towards a destiny

Filed Under: How to behave around someone who lost a child Tagged With: #BTF, #BTFMovement, #Drug Abuse, #drugs, #Heroin, #YouAreNotInvincible

Recent Posts

  • Anecdote 19: How to behave around someone who lost a child, part four
  • Anecdote 18: How to behave around someone who lost a child, part three
  • Anecdote 17: How to behave around someone who lost a child, part two
  • Anecdote 16: How to behave around someone who lost a child, part one
  • Anecdote 15: What to do if you suspect that your child is using drugs, part eleven

Archives

  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017

Benjamin Tofik Farah Movement
PO BOX 17129
JERSEY CITY NJ 07307-7129
info@btfmovement.com

Copyright 2013 by BTF Movement - Jersey City, NJ. All rights reserved.

The BTF Movement is dedicated to educating all peoples to live a drug free existence. Information posted on this website is meant for educational purposes for families in general and those of recovering addicts. We are not medical professionals and strongly recommend professional guidance and intervention for long term recovering addicts and their families