From best-selling and beloved author Christne Harder Tangvald comes an updated and revised edition of her classic book of comfort for grieving children, filled with heart-healing words, fresh watercolor illustrations, and practical resources that help adults guide children through loss. First published in 1988, Someone I Love Died has long comforted the hearts of children 4 to 8 who have lost someone close. It gently leads children through grief with age-appropriate words and solid biblical truth that understands a child's hurting heart. The added interactive resources ensure this book will become a treasured keepsake. Once complete, children create a memory book of the loved one's life. And it offers grown-ups a tool that turns what could be a difficult season into a meaningful time of healing.
APLS GRANT 10-25-2002 $19.99.
Revised Edition Earl A. Grollman. You cannot plant an acorn in the morning and expect that afternoon to sit in the shade of the oak. Antoine de Saint-Exupery Memories of the Past . . . A Bridge to 67 A NEW LIFE.
It is Karen's prayer that you can use this story to help the children in your life navigate the difficult questions about death.
Someone I Love Died is a creative, child-friendly program designed for use with elementary school children, filled with illustrations and original exercises to foster healing, self-understanding, and optimal growth.
If you are a teenager whose friend or relative has died, this book was written for you. Earl A. Grollman, the award-winning author of Living When a Loved One Has Died, explains what to expect when you lose someone you love.
This is a great resource for families, schools, churches and houses of worship, counselors, retirement facilities, hospices, hospitals, and mortuaries. Children always do better with information. This book provides it in their language.
Describes the various feelings survivors may have when someone close to them commits suicide, providing assurance that suicide is the result of depression and not the fault of family and friends. Suggests ways to cope with the situation.
First published in 1996. This new book gives voice to an emerging consensus among bereavement scholars that our understanding of the grief process needs to be expanded.
Only under torture does he discover it himself." This is a beautiful and unflinchingly homest record of how even a stalwart believer can lose all sense of meaning in the universe, and how he can gradually regain his bearings.
PRAISE FOR I WASN'T READY TO SAY GOODBYE "I highly recommend this book, not only to the bereaved, but to friends and counselors as well.