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Grieving Mom Insists On Honoring Her Lost Child At Daughter’s Wedding, Gets A Hit Of Reality
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Grieving Mom Insists On Honoring Her Lost Child At Daughter’s Wedding, Gets A Hit Of Reality

Interview With Expert
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Grieving is a hard and long process. A parent mourns their child for the rest of their life, but should that loss overshadow the family’s happy events? Birthdays, graduations, weddings, even? When this woman asked her daughter for a memorial table for her long-lost sister at her wedding, the bride bluntly refused.

The daughter wanted her wedding to be her day, not overshadowed by the loss of her sister, which happened many years ago. The mother, hurt and insulted, asked the internet whether she was wrong to tell her daughter to “Get over herself” and grant her request.

To find out more about how families can overcome their differences in grief, Bored Panda reached out to a grief and loss coach, Iris Arenson-Fuller, PPC, CPC. She told us what could’ve been a better way for the mother to address her grief in this situation. Read her expert insights below!

Iris Arenson-Fuller: Vision Powered Coaching | Facebook | Instagram | Blooming Beyond Brooklyn: Poems of Loss, Sorrows & Lessons

Everyone deals with grief differently, but no sibling should live in their deceased one’s shadow

Image credits: cottonbro studio / pexels (not the actual photo)

This mother thought her daughter’s wedding should include a memorial table for the bride’s long-deceased sister

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Image credits: Joshua Hoehne / unsplash (not the actual photo)

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Image credits: Karolina Kaboompics / pexels (not the actual photo)

Image credits: Mother_Put_1042

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Asking your living child to honor their deceased sibling on their wedding day is quite intrusive

Iris Arenson-Fuller has spent many years helping people deal with grief, and while the mother’s feelings are understandable, Arenson-Fuller says that the daughter’s reaction is quite appropriate and understandable as well.

“Demanding that a daughter have a memorial table for the departed sibling at her own wedding is really intrusive, in my opinion,” she says. “This is a special day for the daughter and her husband-to-be. It is about joy, new chapters, love and life. It’s not about the departed.”

It’s natural for the mother to feel sad during a time like this. “Happy occasions bring many ambivalent feelings to those who have lost close loved ones,” the grief coach says.

“Mom needs to spend some time alone before the festivities and perhaps after, sitting with her feelings, maybe even writing them down and having a good cry. Her daughter’s wedding is not the place to focus on the deceased child.”

Arenson-Fuller says that if the mother feels conflicted or is unable to feel happy for the daughter on her wedding day, she should seek some help. While her grief is understandable, demanding that a bride make her wedding day about her deceased sister is not okay.

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“We don’t ‘get over’ the loss of a child, or of any beloved,” the grief expert points out. “Time does not heal, as many erroneously believe, though it can soften the sharpness. The pain will always be there and will sometimes take us by surprise at unexpected times, or will be triggered by something.”

A grieving family should talk to each other to make the grieving process easier for everyone

Image credits: Ben White / unsplash (not the actual photo)

From what the author describes here, it seems that the mother and the children have different ways of grieving or are at different stages of grief. And the best thing to do in this situation is for the mother and the living children to talk their feelings out.

“Based on my personal experiences with many losses, as well as my training and work with grieving individuals, I would say that open honest conversation from the get-go is the healthiest way to enable good communications and open processing of grief,” Iris Arenson-Fuller says.

“Some people can more easily express their feelings than others. If the mother is always comparing her living children to the departed sibling, of course, this would not be a good thing.”

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“If, however, she is just mentioning the one who [passed away], because she needs to speak the name and remember, that’s a whole other story.” In some cases, people might need to express their feelings and thoughts in a less triggering setting. A grief coach or a grief counselor might help them do just that.

“The mother should explain she is having a hard day with memories and feelings when they hit her hard.  She should encourage her other offspring to speak about their own, but should never insist or push them,” Arenson-Fuller says. “Again, it’s important to let them know how much she values them, loves and cherishes them, yet also loves and misses the deceased.”

“She should tell them that she is ready to listen, if and when they ever need to talk about their feelings regarding the deceased, regarding their relationship with the deceased, even if they worry about it, upsetting her or even making her cry.”

Many people called out the mother for putting her deceased daughter before her living children

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However, some netizens thought that the mother should be able to grieve how she wants

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Kornelija Viečaitė

Kornelija Viečaitė

Writer, BoredPanda staff

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Hi there, fellow pandas! As a person (over)educated both in social sciences and literature, I'm most interested in how we connect and behave online (and sometimes in real life too.) The human experience is weird, so I try my best to put its peculiarities in writing. As a person who grew up chronically online, I now try to marry two sides of myself: the one who knows too much about MySpace, and the one who can't settle and needs to see every corner of the world.

Read less »
Kornelija Viečaitė

Kornelija Viečaitė

Writer, BoredPanda staff

Hi there, fellow pandas! As a person (over)educated both in social sciences and literature, I'm most interested in how we connect and behave online (and sometimes in real life too.) The human experience is weird, so I try my best to put its peculiarities in writing. As a person who grew up chronically online, I now try to marry two sides of myself: the one who knows too much about MySpace, and the one who can't settle and needs to see every corner of the world.

Mantas Kačerauskas

Mantas Kačerauskas

Author, BoredPanda staff

Read more »

As a Visual Editor at Bored Panda, I indulge in the joy of curating delightful content, from adorable pet photos to hilarious memes, all while nurturing my wanderlust and continuously seeking new adventures and interests—sometimes thrilling, sometimes daunting, but always exciting!

Read less »

Mantas Kačerauskas

Mantas Kačerauskas

Author, BoredPanda staff

As a Visual Editor at Bored Panda, I indulge in the joy of curating delightful content, from adorable pet photos to hilarious memes, all while nurturing my wanderlust and continuously seeking new adventures and interests—sometimes thrilling, sometimes daunting, but always exciting!

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Spencer's slave no longer
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Once again, BP only put part of the reddit post. By all accounts, the mother gave the two younger children to their father, sole custody, for SEVEN YEARS after Brooke died. It's no bloody wonder the living, breathing kids don't want to have a favourite ghost child forced on them. The mother also wished she hadn't had them. For nigh on 30 years this woman has resented her living children.

Cronecast AtTheRisingMoon
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yes, this is not the story of a heartbroken mother as much as it is the story of a person with a personality disorder who holds up their dead child as a way to excuse their dysfunction and extreme self-involvement. Either way, the two living children will likely go no contact at some point and this lady can live her life with the grief altar for her lost child as her only companion. I'm not being as heartless as it sounds, the initial loss must have been devastating and it's not wrong that she sent the children to their father in the aftermath. It's better that then neglecting or abusing them outright (although, the dad presumably also lost a daughter so...yikes). Anyway, this woman wants everyone to know she is a martyr to grief . I'm sorry for her loss but she's been HORRIBLE to her living children and uses grief as an excuse. She's also either go the world's most beleaguered therapist or she's lying about having a therapist.

Load More Replies...
TribbleThinking
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It's her wedding day. Memorial tables are not a tradition for a reason. Ironically, it is you who needs to get over yourself. Either your therapist is terrible, and making a mint from you, or you're just ignoring them.

Ripley
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The irony of this woman, who really needs to get over herself, telling her daughter to do the same is breathtaking.

Load More Replies...
James016
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That second NTA is a muppet, Marnie does not remember Brooke at all.

Justin Smith
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Other commenters pointed it out. The mother drove the two living children to resent and hate their sister.

Load More Replies...
Load More Comments
Spencer's slave no longer
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Once again, BP only put part of the reddit post. By all accounts, the mother gave the two younger children to their father, sole custody, for SEVEN YEARS after Brooke died. It's no bloody wonder the living, breathing kids don't want to have a favourite ghost child forced on them. The mother also wished she hadn't had them. For nigh on 30 years this woman has resented her living children.

Cronecast AtTheRisingMoon
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yes, this is not the story of a heartbroken mother as much as it is the story of a person with a personality disorder who holds up their dead child as a way to excuse their dysfunction and extreme self-involvement. Either way, the two living children will likely go no contact at some point and this lady can live her life with the grief altar for her lost child as her only companion. I'm not being as heartless as it sounds, the initial loss must have been devastating and it's not wrong that she sent the children to their father in the aftermath. It's better that then neglecting or abusing them outright (although, the dad presumably also lost a daughter so...yikes). Anyway, this woman wants everyone to know she is a martyr to grief . I'm sorry for her loss but she's been HORRIBLE to her living children and uses grief as an excuse. She's also either go the world's most beleaguered therapist or she's lying about having a therapist.

Load More Replies...
TribbleThinking
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It's her wedding day. Memorial tables are not a tradition for a reason. Ironically, it is you who needs to get over yourself. Either your therapist is terrible, and making a mint from you, or you're just ignoring them.

Ripley
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The irony of this woman, who really needs to get over herself, telling her daughter to do the same is breathtaking.

Load More Replies...
James016
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That second NTA is a muppet, Marnie does not remember Brooke at all.

Justin Smith
Community Member
1 month ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Other commenters pointed it out. The mother drove the two living children to resent and hate their sister.

Load More Replies...
Load More Comments
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