I'd like to pose a question to you all.
You have an 8 year old son. His best friend dies (is hit by a school bus, as a side note his poor mother saw her son killed).
1. Do you take him to the funeral for his best friend or do you go yourself.
2. If you did take him, if you walked in and saw it was an open casket, would you walk your son out or stay? (this was his first time seeing a dead body)
This is a no judgement thread please-i'd just like to hear what others would have done.
Aimiloo,
When I read this, I couldn't breathe for a moment for the pain of imagining that mother's horror and grief. You are right, the death of children simply shouldn't
be.
I know the funeral has already passed, but for what it's worth, I have read that around seven years of age is when a child is first really psychologically/emotionally/mentally developed enough to grasp what "death" means. Before that age, it seems to be mainly very confusing for children, and so the reason why many times a child will ask "When is [n] coming back?" not understanding that the absence is permanent.
I think when dealing with death and funerals or any other cultural rendering of grief, what others here have said already I agree with. At 8 years of age, I think I would let the child set the tone for how he or she proceeds to deal with such a loss. "And a child shall lead them" seems appropriate to me, since we adults don't seem to have any great monopoly of understanding on death. Sometimes the instincts of children can help us find our own way through the awful maze that the death of a loved one presents. If it were my son and he needed/desired to go, I don't think I could deny him that outlet--or even tentative exploration of death--though as you mentioned it would be incredibly difficult for me, like others here have also stated, to be strong through such an ordeal.
Apologies for the ramblings. My heartfelt sympathies to your sil and her son during this time. I would like to say "I can't imagine what that mother feels", but the real truth is I don't want to. It's so damn frightening to contemplate.
Rebekah