Eluna Custom Resource

Grief by Age: Preschool Children (Age 3-5)

By: Sarah Behm, PPS, MBA

Developmental Stages

a father hugs his preschool aged childDevelopmental Stage: During this preschool age, children develop social/emotional/moral reasoning, engage in imaginative and fantasy play, understand cause and effect, can experience two emotions at once, begin to self-sooth, and experience feelings of shame and guilt.

Concept of Life & Death: Young children will transition from believing all objects are alive to seeing anything that moves as alive. This age group does not understand permanence of death: they may believe the person in asleep and will wake up.

Symptoms of Grief: All children, regardless of their experience with grief, may exhibit the following traits at various ages and stages of their life. However, research has found that after the death of loved one, children may have prolonged or noticeable experiences with one or more of the following symptoms:

  • Behavioral:
    • clingy
    • stubborn
    • impulsive
    • temper tantrums
    • risky behaviors
    • regression (bed wetting/thumb sucking)
    • talking less
  • Emotional:
    • fear of separation
    • extreme sadness/depression
    • unable to be soothed/comforted
    • difficulty with change
  • Physical:
    • frequent headaches or stomachaches
    • more colds than usual
  • Cognitive:
    • magical thinking (that the deceased will return)
    • constant questioning
    • child may believe they caused the death and toxic shame or excessive guilt may develop

How to Help – the 6 Rs:

Reassure:

  • Remind the child that they are safe and loved.
  • When implementing consequences, have child in sight during time-outs (1 min per year of child’s age) and use a repair phase afterwards like: “you and I are okay now”.
  • Identify special ways that the deceased person would soothe the child and incorporate these into daily routines (cooking a comfort food, singing a specific lullaby, comforting child with a special blanket).
  • Be available for their emotional needs and acknowledge feelings “I see that you are…upset/angry/frustrated”.
  • Model appropriate ways to express feelings.
  • Provide choices when possible “would you like to wear the green or red shirt today”.

Routine:

  • Try to stick to a consistent schedule for sleeping, eating, and childcare.
  • Offer healthy comfort foods when child is having a hard day.
  • If you are one of the primary caregivers, avoid being away for several days at a time.

Release:

  • Make time for creative and physical outlets through playing, art, dancing, movement, and music.
  • Read age-appropriate books about grief.

Remember:

Reflect & Connect:

“Daddy’s heart stopped working.”

“Your mom had an accident and died from her injuries.”

“Grandma died today, and we will not be seeing her again.”

“Grandpa died today and won’t be coming home from the hospital.”

Reach out:

PERSONALIZED CARE

Overwhelmed?

Eluna’s personalized support service will create a custom list of resources and local referrals unique to you or the family you’re supporting. Recognizing that it can be hard to find what you need, we are here to listen with an open heart and provide resources that reflect each unique story, at no charge. We hope to connect with you soon.

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