02/28/2026
The Ripple Effect: When the Death of a Child Becomes Many Losses
▪️The death of a child is not a single loss.
It is a life-altering rupture that touches every layer of a parent’s world — emotional, relational, neurological, spiritual, financial, and social. What the public often sees is one funeral, one obituary, one heartbreaking moment in time.
▪️What people do not see is the ripple effect.
Grief researchers refer to these ongoing impacts as secondary losses — the additional losses that unfold because of the primary loss.¹ They are not smaller losses. They are consequential ones. They quietly reshape daily living and slowly alter the landscape of a parent’s life.
Understanding this ripple effect and how it adds to the burden, heighting the pain and isolation. The goal is that this awareness helps the world respond with greater compassion.
▪️What Are Secondary Losses?
Secondary losses are the changes and disruptions that follow the death of a child. They often emerge gradually. A parent may not even have language for them at first — only the feeling that everything has changed.
These losses are real.
They disrupt their life and they matter.
▪️Loss of Self and Identity
Many bereaved parents describe feeling as though a part of themselves has been altered or displaced.² They may ask:
Who am I now?
Am I still a mother? Still a father?
The parental role does not die when a child dies. Love for their child does not disappear, but the way that role is lived changes profoundly. Attachment research reminds us that the bond between parent and child is biologically and psychologically embedded.³ When a child dies, that bond does not simply switch off. The love remains active. Grief is love with no place to go.
Scripture reflects this depth of emotional exhaustion. In Psalm 6:6, David writes,
“I am worn out from my groaning. All night long I flood my bed with weeping.”
There is no minimizing here. Only honest acknowledgment that grief reaches into the very core of every bereaved parent.
▪️Loss of Security and the Assumptive World
Psychologists use the term “assumptive world” to describe our basic beliefs about safety, predictability, and order.⁴ The death of a child often shatters those assumptions.
The world may no longer feel safe. The future may no longer feel dependable.
In Job 3, after losing his children, Job cries out in anguish. His lament is not presented as weakness — it is preserved as sacred Scripture. His world had been overturned. The Bible does not rush him past that reality.
▪️Loss of Relationships and Community
One of the more painful secondary losses can be relational. Friends may grow quiet. Extended family dynamics may shift.⁵ Some people withdraw not out of indifference, but out of discomfort or uncertainty about what to say.⁶
For the bereaved parent, however, the impact can feel like abandonment layered on top of heartbreak.
Even Jesus, in His suffering, experienced relational thinning. In Matthew 26:40, during His anguish in Gethsemane, He returned to find His closest companions asleep. Suffering can narrow circles.
This factor reveals how fragile support systems can become under the weight of grief.
▪️Loss of Cognitive Function and Capacity
Grief is not only emotional.
It is physical and neurological.
Research shows that acute grief activates brain regions associated with physical pain.⁷ Concentration can diminish. Memory can falter. Functioning in day to day activities may decline.⁸ Sleep disruption and immune strain are common.⁹
When a bereaved parent forgets appointments, struggles to focus at work, or feels overwhelmed by small tasks, this is not weakness. It is the body carrying what the heart has endured.
Scripture recognizes this embodiment of grief. In Psalm 31:9–10, David writes,
“My eyes grow weak with sorrow, my soul and body with grief.”
The Bible never separates emotional pain from physical consequence.
▪️Loss of the Future
Perhaps one of the most piercing secondary losses is the loss of the anticipated future.¹⁰
The graduation not attended.
The wedding not celebrated.
The grandchildren not held.
The future that once felt certain is now rewritten.
Jeremiah expresses this collapse of joy in Jeremiah 8:18: “My joy is gone; grief is upon me; my heart is sick within me.”
Grief is not only about what was.
It is about what will never be.
▪️Loss of Routine, Structure, and Lifestyle
Family systems theory reminds us that when one member of a family is removed, the entire system reorganizes.¹¹ Roles shift. Traditions change. Holidays feel different.
Even the physical space of the home carries absence.
In Ruth 1:20–21, Naomi says,
“Don’t call me Naomi… Call me Mara.”
Her losses had altered how she understood herself and her story. Scripture gives dignity to that change.
▪️Why This Matters
When society sees only one loss, it may unintentionally expect one recovery.
But bereaved parents are often navigating multiple layers of loss simultaneously — identity, community, security, functioning, and future.
When these secondary losses are not acknowledged, grief can become what researchers call disenfranchised grief — grief that is insufficiently supported or recognized by society.¹²
Naming the ripple effect allows us to move from confusion to compassion.
▪️How Can We Repair the Ripple?
Education reduces fear.
Understanding reduces avoidance.
Research consistently identifies social support as one of the strongest protective factors in grief adaptation.¹³ Most people do care — they simply need guidance.
▪️Here are ways the outside world can respond with greater empathy:
1. Stay present beyond the funeral.
2. Speak the child’s name with gentleness.
3. Release expectations about timelines.
4. Allow personality shifts without demanding the “old” version back.
5. Adjust practical demands when concentration and energy are limited.
6. Make space for lament rather than rushing resolution.
Romans 12:15 simply says,
“Mourn with those who mourn.”
It does not give a timeline.
It does not say for one week or one month or even one year. Time does not heal all wounds.
It does not instruct us to fix, solve, or explain.
It invites us to gently enter into the bereaved parent’s grief.
As a bereaved mother, I did not understand the language of secondary losses at first. I only knew that everything was different. I was not only grieving my child — I was grieving the version of myself I once knew, the future I had imagined, the ease in relationships that quietly shifted, and the safety I once felt in the world.
Some days I wondered why simple tasks felt so heavy. Why conversations felt exhausting. Why certain friendships faded. It was not because I was weak. It was because grief had touched every layer of my life.
Over time, I learned that nothing was “wrong” with me. I was responding to a profound life altering impact. Naming these secondary losses gave me language. This language somehow gave me permission to grieve in a manner that made sense to my heart, not the world’s unrealistic expectations and to most importantly extend compassion to myself.
If you are a bereaved parent reading this, please know: the ripple effect does not mean you are unraveling. It means you love your child deeply. And deep love leaves deep impact.
▪️Conclusion
The death of a child is not one loss.
It is many.
And until the world recognizes this ripple effect, these secondary losses (there are many more not listed here) that quietly compound the bereaved parents sorrow, we are underestimating what bereaved parents are carrying each day.
But when we stop to understand, something shifts.
Compassion deepens.
Judgment softens.
Presence becomes steadier.
Healing does not mean returning to who they were.
It means learning to live honestly within who they are becoming.
And no parent should have to navigate that transformation alone.
Dr. Cali
Bereaved Mother
Bereaved Parents Advocate
About the Author
Dr. Cali Anderson, D.Min., M.Div., M.C.C., is a bereaved mother, grief educator, and founder of Grief Bridge, a ministry dedicated to supporting and equipping bereaved parents and the communities who walk alongside them. Drawing from both lived experience and academic research, her work focuses on compassionate education, faith-integrated grief support, and helping churches and families respond to loss with understanding and presence.
RESOURCES:
1. Kenneth J. Doka, Disenfranchised Grief: New Directions, Challenges, and Strategies for Practice (Champaign, IL: Research Press, 2002).
2. Robert A. Neimeyer, Meaning Reconstruction in the Wake of Loss (Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 2001).
3. John Bowlby, Attachment and Loss, Vol. 3: Loss: Sadness and Depression (New York: Basic Books, 1980).
4. Ronnie Janoff-Bulman, Shattered Assumptions (New York: Free Press, 1992).
5. Therese A. Rando, Treatment of Complicated Mourning (Champaign, IL: Research Press, 1993).
6. Susan J. Brison, “Trauma Narratives and the Remaking of the Self,” in Acts of Memory, ed. Mieke Bal et al. (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1999).
7. Naomi I. Eisenberger et al., “Does Rejection Hurt? An fMRI Study of Social Exclusion,” Science 302, no. 5643 (2003): 290–292.
8. Mary-Frances O’Connor, “Grief: A Brief History of Research on How Body, Mind, and Brain Adapt,” Psychosomatic Medicine 81, no. 8 (2019): 731–738.
9. George A. Bonanno, The Other Side of Sadness (New York: Basic Books, 2009).
10. Neimeyer, Meaning Reconstruction in the Wake of Loss.
11. Murray Bowen, Family Therapy in Clinical Practice (New York: Jason Aronson, 1978).
12. Doka, Disenfranchised Grief.
13. Bonanno, The Other Side of Sadness.