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Tens of millions of Americans have lost a parent by the age of 25. What is grief like for these young adults just starting out?
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If you could speak again with a loved one who has passed away, would you? With recent advances in artificially intelligent grief tech, this question isn鈥檛 just hypothetical anymore.
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Anita has heard one resounding truth from her friends who lost a parent in early adulthood: That death was the biggest thing that has ever happened to them. She meets two people who've built specific communities around their grief on the internet and a writer who experienced losing his dad twice.
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The loss of a pet is often diminished and deemed less important than other losses. But the grief that comes after is real and difficult for pet owners and veterinarians alike.
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Anita is a dog mom. Her wire-haired, bearded terrier Oliver has been her companion through heartbreak, job changes and pandemic turmoil. She's never going to feel ready to say goodbye, but she knows from watching others lose family pets, that pet grief can wreck you, and it's better to acknowledge this reality sooner rather than later. She talks with pet owners, a veterinary social worker, a vet and her own parents about making space for pet grief and memorializing the animal companions we have loved.
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How do we send messages across The Great Divide? In the final episode of Season 1, Nnenna and Phil try to communicate with each other in the same way that they've always loved each other: beyond space and time.
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Though every meal feels different without her husband Phil, breakfast is the hardest in the months following his passing. Nnenna reclaims the most important meal of the day with a little help from an underrated pantry staple. | Love this podcast? Support it with a donation at wunc.org/give.
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When something bad happens people often hear the same advice: 鈥渆verything happens for a reason鈥 or 鈥渢ime heals all wounds.鈥 But Nora McInerny says that鈥
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When something bad happens people often hear the same advice: 鈥渆verything happens for a reason鈥 or 鈥渢ime heals all wounds.鈥 But Nora McInerny says that鈥