Melissa Gould lost her husband Joel nearly nine years ago when their daughter, Sophie, was 13 years old. The mother and daughter processed the loss in their very own, very distinct ways: Sophie grieved mostly in silence as a young teen, not wanting to attract pity or stand out from her peers. Melissa grieved loudly – and then publicly, when her memoir, Widowish, came out last year. We talk to both Melissa and Sophie about how complicated it can be when grief takes different shapes in the family, and how their mother-daughter relationship is evolving into one between two adults.
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14: 'Auntie' Is A Verb
13: Hobbies and Hiding in the Bathroom: How Parents Spend Their Free Time
12: A Listener Asks: I’ve Changed As a Parent. What Do I Do About the Past?
11: More Than A Feeling
10: The Family Secret That Keeps Me Honest With My Children
9: Will I Ever Sleep Again?
8: Learning How To Be A Working Parent – And Not Just A Parent, Who Also Works
7: ‘Welcome To Eighth Grade, People’
6: A Lesson In Not Overthinking It
5: The Case For Parenting In Community
4: I'm Giving My Kids The Childhood I Wanted. But I Struggle To Relate To It
3: Are You Okay?
2: Yasmeen's Bedtime Problem
1: Parenting Changes Us, Whether We Like It or Not
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