When Your Friend's Child Dies: A Guide to Being a Thoughtful and Caring Friend

When Your Friend's Child Dies: A Guide to Being a Thoughtful and Caring Friend

A simply written, straight-forward book that will tell you what to say and do when you have a friend whose child has died. And, just as important, Chapter 1 tells you what not to say and why. An early reader described this book as a "slap-in-the-face wake-up call." After reading this book you will positively know how to comfort a parent who has lost a child, even ten years later. You won't have to memorize it; you will feel it. This book belongs in every household!



Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 306
EAN: 9780966665505
ISBN: 0966665503
Label: Angel Hugs Pub
Manufacturer: Angel Hugs Pub
Number Of Pages: 80
Publication Date: 1998-11-20
Publisher: Angel Hugs Pub
Studio: Angel Hugs Pub



Related Items


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: An Okay Guide
Comment: Being a chaplain, I am always looking for books that I can recommend to people. And now that I have gone through the experience of watching a family member's child die, I was very interested in how to handle the situation. I want to be thoughtful and make sure I was doing all that I could do. Someone recommended this book and I ordered it immediately.

After reading it, I can only give it two stars. There are some good points in the book but I really get a harsh overtone of anger and condescension. Maybe I am mis-reading? There are also several contradictions in there that can leave a reader confused. The author talks about not comparing grief from one parent to another and yet she 'slams' those who have had a miscarriage. And to me, it sounds like any child that has not had a chance to say 'I love you' or interact with the parents for any amount of time does not qualify for the sympathy and care of others. She also one page states not to buy cards because they are nonsense and then later in the book says that it's extremely important to buy and send a card.

In the end, I feel like there are better books out there that are written with more compassion for the reader. I felt berated after reading this and that is not something that I want to feel. I already feel pretty darn sad and upset about the death. I need someone else to make me feel worse.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: a very helpful little book!! must read!!
Comment: Having lost a child recently, I wish everyone would read this book! At times like this, nobody really ever knows what to say. As a result, people often end up saying things that are hurtful or offensive to grieving parents. This book will help the reader know what to say and what NOT to say to grieving friends. If in doubt, especially with men, perhaps the most sensitive thing to do is to say, "I'm so sorry for your loss. Would you like to talk about __?" Then take your cues from the grieving parent. You just might be surprised to see his/her eyes light up and a smile come to his/her face. I would highly recommend that copies of this book be placed in every funeral parlor, hospital, and church. It's a gem! Please read it BEFORE you need it.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Good book, but.......
Comment: Use this book as a guide, but do remember that people are all different and what is ok for one grieving parent may not be acceptable to another. Juliane Grant says it's comforting to a grieving parent to hear their child's name. I have a friend who lost his daughter in a very tragic accident and to him, hearing her name is the equivalent of ripping a scab off a wound. It just hurts him too much.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Do's and Don'ts
Comment: This is a wonderful little book for people who have a friend who has lost a child but has not lost one themselves. It tells all the important do's and don'ts. One thing I would like to recommend is that you know your friend and don't take all this "advice" so literal. I have one friend that does not want to have other parents tell her how their children are doing in all their activities. It is still so painful for her to hear these things with it being so sudden after her son's death. Practice sensitivity and know that the pain of lossing a child is the greatest of all.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: I was so disappointed with this book, it took my breath away
Comment: I liked the book up until page 20. I was so hurt I couldn't read beyond that point in her book.I am a mother of three boys and I am a mother of three babies taken to heaven before their birth. I bought the book because a friend of mine lost her 17 year old son within weeks of my baby dying. My friend and I have another friend who is always saying things in a hurtful way and I was going to send this book to her.

On page 20 the author makes a reference about how a dog dying isn't the same as a child loss and then in the next paragraph says that a misscarriage is sad and even heartbreaking but not the same as losing a child. That cut through me like a knife. I felt my baby girl kicking in my belly, I saw her waving and I have pictures of her. My baby was a child and my other two babies that I lost were children. Even God recognizes them in Psalms, He has their days planned out before they are even formed in their mothers womb. My future did lie with my babies. My daughter was 4 1/2 months gestation when she died. A very real family member in my eyes. I don't have the strength to help this author understand that my miscarried children were children and I would have given anything to of met them atleast for one day. I will meet my babies someday and raise them in a perfect world when I get to heaven. We were all 4 1/2 months gestational in our mother's womb, does that mean we are more important because we were born and our babies weren't? This author on page 19 says "Why would anyone ever want to compare the severity of grief? Who ever knows how the loss feels to the person grieving?" Then on the very next page she compares the grief of mothers who have babies taken to heaven before they are born. I don't understand this. My heart is broken for any parent who loses a child and I agree until it happens to you, you can never truly know how it feels but I truly feel the pain of anyone who loses children at any STAGE of life. I was truly hurt by this book and I will be sending it back. When I saw this book, I thought, good, a way to help friends understand how our dreams, our future, and the life we planned for our babies, and how we feel we were cheated out of all of the above when our babies died. My three boys talk about their sister all of the time. My miscarried babies are real family members to us. Julane, I am sorry for your lose of Darren but please take your own advice on how to be thoughtful to all kinds of parents who lose their children. May God Bless you.



Buy it now at Amazon.com!