

How Do You Tell a Child Someone They Love Is Dying?
Aug 11, 2025
14:12
How do you talk to your child about a terminal illness in the family? What if it’s not your family, but your best friend's—and you want to support both their kids and your own? In today’s heart-wrenching episode, Justin and Kylie tackle one of the toughest parenting challenges: helping children navigate the looming death of a loved one. With compassion, honesty, and practical wisdom, they share how to approach these conversations—and how to show up when words aren’t enough.
KEY POINTS:
- Be honest with children in age-appropriate ways—truth helps, secrecy hurts.
- Children need predictability: keep routines and rituals where possible.
- Acknowledge emotions—yours and theirs. Say “I feel sad too.”
- When supporting a grieving friend, show up practically. Don’t ask, just do.
- Teach your child how to be a caring friend: “I don’t know what to say, but I care about you.”
- Offer your home as a safe place for affected children to rest and just be kids.
- Model empathy, presence, and consistency—not just for the family in crisis, but for your child watching.
QUOTE OF THE EPISODE:
"I don’t know what to say, but I care about you." — Teach this to your child, and say it yourself. It matters.
RESOURCES MENTIONED:
- Happy Families Website (submit your question here)
- Has Screen Use Crossed the Line in Your Home? - With Brad Marshall
ACTION STEPS FOR PARENTS:
- Speak to your child about serious illness honestly and age-appropriately.
- Keep routines and rituals in place to provide stability.
- Validate and model emotional expression: let your child see that it’s okay to be sad, angry, or confused.
- Help your child support their friend with care, not pressure.
- Offer practical help to grieving families—meals, transport, child-minding—without needing to be asked.
- Let your home be a haven for kids who are carrying heavy emotional loads.
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