[Reviewed and updated November 12, 2024]
If any of the ideas suggested here don’t fit with a particular culture or tradition, or if they don’t seem to suit you or the person(s) you’re wanting to help, then simply ignore them and go on to others.
As soon as you learn that a death has happened, there are several things that you can do right away. For example, you can:
- Acknowledge the loss. Either in person, by telephone, or in writing, let the mourner know who you are, how you became aware of the loss and that you care.
- Attend the funeral: Say goodbye to the deceased and demonstrate support for those most impacted by the death. If possible, attend the visitation, funeral, committal, and gathering afterward.
- Let the mourner know if you found the ceremony especially meaningful.
- Assemble a funeral scrapbook for the family, which could include the obituary, funeral program, and room for cards, notes and other mementos.
- Arrange to have the ceremony video- or audio-taped; offer to review the recording with the mourner at a later time.
- Offer tangible symbols of support: a phone call, note, letter, comfort food, flowers or a potted plant, a hope-filled book, or a photo frame.
- Send flowers, a potted plant, hanging basket, bulbs, tree seedling, or perennials to place or plant at the gravesite.
- Contact the mourner’s network of friends and family and help them choose a way to help (check on the mourner, fix a meal, walk the dog, cut the grass, rake the leaves).
- Fix and bring a meal; include non-alcoholic, non-caffeinated beverages.
- Initiate contact; invite the mourner to share what happened, with ample opportunity to tell you the story of the loss.
- Listen with your heart, with honest concern and curiosity, respectfully and without judging, without criticism, without giving advice, without being the expert with all the answers.
- Encourage, reflect, respond to and validate feelings, however they are expressed, and hold them in confidence.
- Be willing to listen to the same story, over and over again if needed, with mouth closed and ears open.
- Be fully and physically present: Allow sufficient time; listen attentively; don’t appear rushed; sit rather than stand; maintain eye contact and an attentive posture with your arms free and uncrossed; match the volume, tone and speed of your voice to the mourner’s; let the mourner steer the conversation; nod and affirm.
- Accept, permit and be present in times of silence.
- Permit yourself to cry, too. Your tears mingled with your friend’s convey what words cannot.
- Understand the uniqueness of grief: Everyone is different, shaped by our individual life experiences.
- Be patient. The grief process takes a long time; let the mourner set the pace.
- Recognize that although you cannot take the pain away, you can enter into it with your friend. You can remain available long after the death occurs, when your friend will need you the most.
Related:
- 23 Professionals Share the Best Way to Support Someone Who Is Grieving
- 50 Practical Gestures to Help A Grieving Friend
- Common Myths and Misconceptions About Grief
- Dead Parents Club
- Do's and Don'ts for the Bereaved and Their Well-Meaning Friends
- Easy How To Tips for Writing A Condolence Card or Note
- Good Grief Support Isn't Just A One-Time Thing
- Grief: Understanding The Process
- Helping Another in Grief: Suggested Resources
- How to Help After A Death
- In Grief: "Being There" for Someone in Mourning
- Please read this before you post another RIP on social media
- The Grieving Need You Most After The Funeral
- The Mistake I Made with My Grieving Friend
- There Is Nothing You Can Say to Heal Someone Else's Grief
- Use Crowdfunding to Help With Funeral Expenses
- What "Should" You Say When Someone Dies?
- What to Say When Someone Is Grieving
- When Their World Stops: The Essential Guide to TRULY Helping Anyone in Grief
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