Explaining
Cremation to a Child
The death of a family
member or friend not only affects adults, but also can have a profound
impact on children. Children experience grief just as adults do.
Child experts say that even before children are able to talk, they
grieve when someone loved dies. And these feelings about the death
become a part of their lives forever.
It is important to remember
that children deal with death differently at different ages and
that their reactions are not always obvious or immediate. A child
at two or three years of age has little understanding of the meaning
of death while one who is eight or nine has a capacity to grasp
life’s mysteries and will remember the experience vividly.
The level of a child’s emotional development should be taken
into consideration by the adult before talking to the child about
death or death related topics.
Adults who are willing
to talk openly about the death of a loved one help a child understand
that grief is a natural feeling when someone has died. A child needs
adults to confirm that it’s all right to be sad and to cry;
that the hurt they feel now won’t last forever.
Answering a Child’s Questions
Caring parents can help
a child during a time of loss by being open, honest and loving and
by responding to his or her questions in a way that shows they care.
When answering a child’s
questions, adults should keep in mind the following:
- Tell a child only
what he or she is capable of understanding.
- There is no need
to be evasive, but modify explanations to what the child can comprehend.
- A too complicated
reply often confuses a child.
- Use language that
the child can understand.
- What is said is important,
but the manner in which it is said has even greater significance.Be
aware of voice tone. Try to answer the questions in a matter-of-fact
way without too much emotion.
- Remember that what
is communicated without words can be just as meaningful to a child
as what is actually said.
It is not unusual for
a child to ask the same question again and again. Repeating questions
and getting answers help the child understand and adjust to the
loss of someone loved.
Explaining Cremation
When a deceased family
member or friend is to be cremated or already has been cremated,
your child may want to know what cremation is. In answering your
child’s questions about cremation, keep in mind the guidelines
that have already been outlined in this leaflet. Keep your explanation
of what cremation involves simple and easy-to-understand.
In explaining cremation to your child, avoid words that may have
a frightening connotation such as “fire” and “burn”.
Instead, in a straight-forward manner, tell your child that the
deceased body, enclosed in a casket or container, is taken to a
place call a crematory where it goes through a special process that
reduces it to small particles resembling fine gray or white sand.
Be sure to point out that a dead body feels no pain.
Let your child know
that these cremated remains are placed in a container called an
urn and returned to the family. If cremation has already taken place
and the container picked up, you may want to show it to the child.
Because children are curious, your child may want to look at the
contents. If your child makes such a request, look at them yourself
first so that you can describe what they look like. Share this with
your child. Then let the child decide whether to proceed further.
If possible, arrange
for a time when you and your child can be with the body before the
cremation is carried out. If handled correctly, this time can be
a positive experience for the child. It can provide an opportunity
for the child to say “goodbye” and accept the reality
of death. However, the viewing of the body should not be forced.
Use your best judgment on whether or not this should be done.
Depending on the age
of your child, you may wish to include him or her in the planning
of what will be done with the cremated remains. Before you do this,
familiarize yourself with the many types of cremation memorials
available. Some of the many options to consider include burying
the remains in a family burial plot, interring them in an urn garden
that many cemeteries have, or placing the urn in a columbarium niche.
Defined as a recessed compartment, the niche may be an open front
protected by glass or a closed front faced with bronze, marble,
or granite. (An arrangement of niches is called a columbarium, which
may be an entire building, a room, a bank along a corridor or a
series of special indoor alcoves. It also may be part of an outdoor
setting such as a garden wall.) Although your child may not completely
understand these or other options for memorialization, being involved
in the planning helps establish a sense of comfort and understanding
that life goes on even though someone loved has died.
If you incur any
difficulties in explaining death or cremation to your child, you
may wish to consult a child guidance counselor who specializes in
these areas.
When a child asks questions
about cremation, adults should be prepared to answer.
*This pamphlet
is posted with permission from http://www.cremationassociation.org |