Many children want to include their loved person in celebrations and some joy and a sense of continuation can come from this.
Here are a few ideas on how this can be done but the most important thing is to find a way of remembrance that is meaningful for your family and your child. (In fact, talking about this with the child and including them in the Christmas plans can be a way of allowing them their feelings and finding the balance between the past and the present.)
- Christmas tree decorations: Your child may like to decorate a special bauble or ornament for the tree and write the name of the loved person on this. Alternatively they may want to choose some significant photos and make them into decorations, hanging them from the tree. It might appeal to your child to make a star shaped decoration and draw or write some important words that remind them of the loved person. They may also like to make paper chains as decorations and write or draw on these.
- Christmas cards: your child may have saved Christmas cards from previous years when their loved one was still with them. If so, they may like to put these somewhere prominent in the home.
- Setting a place at the table: If the Christmas meal was an important part of the celebrations, your child may like to mark this by setting a place for the loved person, maybe writing their name on a card or lighting a candle to sit at their place on the table.
- Gifts: your child may appreciate having a present to unwrap from the loved person, this can be chosen with care and consideration. If your family visits the grave or another special place to remember the loved person, your child might like to take a gift to leave there, this could be flowers, a card, or treats for the birds if it is outside.
- Letter writing: Christmas also marks the time when we are coming to the end of another year without the loved one. Your child may like to take this opportunity to write a card or a letter to tell the person who has died, all about the year that has passed. Writing can be highly therapeutic for adults and children and can be a way of expressing all the feelings we would like to have shared with them.
- Christmas traditions: many families have their own particular ways of celebrating - for instance, a special cake recipe, special way of giving and receiving gifts, going out together for a walk on Christmas morning or many other ways of marking this special time. Your child may feel they would like these traditions to continue as a way of including the loved person, you may find that, if you talk with them about this, they can be reassured to know that some aspects of the day can stay unchanged.
As is so often the case in adjusting to life after bereavement, one of the most important things we can offer our children is a listening ear, to be ready to talk with them and listen to them around what they want, how and if they want to remember the loved person. For some children it might be too painful to include the person who died in their celebrations and this too can be respected. The adults can find their own way of remembering and it may always be possible that next year your child will want to do things differently.
Adapted from an earlier blog by Jayne Paulson - thank you.
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