Adam Parker Adam Parker

When Something You Love Goes Away

Sometimes, something really important goes away.

It might be a person you love.
A pet.
A teacher.
A friend.
A home.
A routine.
Even a version of life that felt safe.

And when that happens, it can feel confusing, heavy, or unfair—especially for kids, who don’t always have the words yet.

Here’s something important to know first:

If you feel sad, mad, quiet, weird, or nothing at all—you’re not doing it wrong.

Loss doesn’t come with instructions.

Loss Can Look Like a Lot of Things

Grown-ups sometimes think “loss” only means when someone passes away. But kids lose things in lots of ways:

  • A best friend who moves away

  • A pet that doesn’t come home

  • Parents who separate

  • A favorite teacher changing schools

  • A grandparent who gets very sick

  • A life that suddenly feels different

Your brain notices when something meaningful disappears.
Your heart notices too.

Feelings Don’t Follow Rules

Some days you might cry.
Some days you might laugh and feel fine.
Some days you might feel mad at everyone.
Some days you might not feel much at all.

All of that is allowed.

Feelings don’t line up neatly. They show up when they want to.

Missing Means It Mattered

Here’s a gentle truth I tell kids all the time:

If it hurts to miss someone or something, that means it was important.

The pain isn’t proof that you’re weak.
It’s proof that you cared.

And caring is a good thing, even when it hurts.

You Don’t Have to “Be Over It”

Sometimes people say things like:

  • “You’re so strong.”

  • “At least you still have…”

  • “It’s time to move on.”

But healing doesn’t mean forgetting.
It doesn’t mean pretending nothing happened.

It means learning how to carry the memory without it hurting quite as much.

That takes time. And time looks different for everyone.

A Small Thing That Can Help

If you’re a kid (or helping one), try this:

Name it.
You can say:

  • “I miss ___.”

  • “I’m sad because ___.”

  • “I don’t like that this changed.”

Saying it out loud helps your brain and heart work together.

You’re Not Broken

If you’re hurting, nothing is wrong with you.
If you’re not hurting yet, nothing is wrong with you either.

Loss is part of being human.
And humans heal best when they’re allowed to feel, ask questions, and be honest.

One Last Thing

Even when something goes away,
what it gave you doesn’t disappear.

The love stays.
The memories stay.
The way it changed you stays.

And you don’t have to carry it alone.

 

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