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Pauli
01-23-2009, 05:17 PM
Sibling Grief


When a brother or sister dies, the sudden reality of the death may be too much for families to accept. Siblings who are left with this pain may experience extreme loneliness because they believe that no one understands what they're going through. They may feel they cannot share their feelings with other members of the family because they want to protect them from additional pain. Due to the shock and confusion that murder brings, there will be no comprehension of why their brother or sister was so quickly taken from them.

Why Sibling Grief is Different
Siblings have their own method of grieving. Their parents lost a child, they have lost a sibling and the relationship is completely different. Many times siblings will experience a loss of identity as their self-image is inter-related with the person lost. Siblings may experience varied emotions including anger, guilt, grief and abandonment. They may attempt to deal with these powerful feelings through denial or suppression. Sometimes the siblings experience may be further complicated by the failure of others to recognize their loss. They may be coping not only with the loss of a sibling but also with the loss of functional parents.

Actual Comments from Siblings

* Denial - "Because murder is too hard to accept, I denied it happened. I did it for my own protection. I pretended it happened to someone else."
* Anger - "Verbally I would lash out at everyone. I couldn't express any other feeling. My sister was gone and as far as I was concerned, it was the world's fault."
* Guilt - "My guilt led me to ask questions like 'Why am I still here?,' 'Why wasn't it me?,' and 'What did I do wrong for this to happen to my sister?'"
* Fear - "When my brother was murdered, I thought who is next in our family? All of a sudden our family is a target and we can't hide and protect ourselves from further harm."
* Physical Distress - "I couldn't relax. My body suffered from stress with headaches, neck aches and having a few hours of sleep including nightmares didn't help."
* Loss of Innocence - "I'm no longer a child it seems. Murder made me grow-up too fast and I lost a big part of my childhood that I can never get back."
* Protective - "When my sister was murdered, I was taking the role of my parents. I came to their side to comfort them. It took a while for me to think of my own grief."
* Loneliness - "I had a friend of ten years tell me she couldn't handle being my friend anymore. She told me she didn't want to continue our relationship because she thought that murder would spread to her and her family."
* Depression - "I didn't want to get up from bed. If I did, I would dread going outside. I didn't want to see anyone. I felt that I couldn't trust anyone anymore, so I didn't want to make eye contact."

Pointers for Parents

* Helpful
o Accept your child's feelings. Allow them to grieve in their own way and encourage the expression of feelings.
o Work on your own grief. Express sadness, anger and frustration. Parents and children may be drawn together by sharing each other's grief.
o Spend time regularly with each child. This will offer assurance that they are loved. Show them that they are as important as the lost sibling.
o Find healthy ways to remember your loved one. There are ways to cherish their memory. Some suggestions would be writing down memories in a journal, organizing photos in a special album or framing special artwork or writings.
o Each child needs individual acceptance. Try to nurture their own identity.
o Get help. Getting outside help may make it easier for them to communicate.
* Not Helpful
o Don't judge. Don't tell them not to cry or suggest they be strong. Their loss needs to be recognized.
o Don't keep feelings to yourself. Withholding your emotions from the rest of the family may inhibit others.
o Don't avoid them. This will make them feel rejected and abandoned. Don't make them feel that they have become a burden.
o Don't take-down family pictures. This may be interpreted by the sibling as a loss of family and may be devastating.
o Don't compare the lost child to the living child. It could cause them to think they can't measure up.
o Don't limit their space. This may happen if you feel a great need to be over-protective.

ReddCurrlz
04-21-2009, 03:52 AM
This is the closest thing I could find to a family member. Tammy Sue Wilson was turning 21 the very next day when Ron Garner took her from us in 1982. She is my cousin and we were very close; like sisters actually.

Tammy worked for Winchells donuts and the murderer was her boss, an ex con (although she didn't know that). The murderer kept hounding her to be his mistress and she kept refusing. On the eve of her 21st birthday, she had friends at her house and it seems that the murderer kept harassing her by phone, begging her to be his mistress. She told her friends that she had become very afraid of this man and wasn't sure what to do. At the end of the evening, her friends offered to stay with her but she declined, and went to bed.

Sometime in the night, the murderer got into her apartment through a window, and strangled her with her bra. Her mom, my favorite aunt, came to her apartment the next day, they were supposed to go shopping for her birthday, and became worried when Tammy wouldn't answer the door or the phone, so she let herself in. That's when she found her in her bed.

This man took her from us because of his rage and selfishness. He did commit another murder of a de la Costa woman, and based on the evidence from that murder, they were able to obtain a conviction for Tammy's murder, just not for de la Costa's murder. He was sentenced to 25 years. He has come up for parole once and through hundreds of letters from families and friends, his parole was denied.

He's coming up for parole again in September and we are in the process of obtaining letters for the parole board again, to deny his parole again.

The prosecutor who is now the Governor of Colorado, Bill Ritter, Jr., remembers this case very well and talks to my aunt frequently about it. He passed a law called "Tammy's Law" iirc so his knowledge of this case helps us keep that monster behind bars.

Tammy was a gorgeous woman with a zeal for life and God. I was devastated when he took her from me. Not a day goes by that I don't remember her.

Heathersauntlisa
06-06-2009, 11:40 PM
my niece was killed by a man who she new, he was also violent and about 21 yrs older than her, drugs were involved and tho heather was not perfect, she didnt deserve to die this way. no charges have been filed yet , but I pray every day that they are,its hard to get on with your life when your family member will forever have no life to get on with,

Amusedtdth
07-16-2009, 02:21 PM
my niece was killed by a man who she new, he was also violent and about 21 yrs older than her, drugs were involved and tho heather was not perfect, she didnt deserve to die this way. no charges have been filed yet , but I pray every day that they are,its hard to get on with your life when your family member will forever have no life to get on with,

:021: I'm so sorry for your loss. May God grant you peace and justice.

texanne
07-16-2009, 03:55 PM
Heather: I am so sorry about your loss. The fact that someone would deliberately do that to a loved one just increases the pain. I hope you have someone around you that will let you lean on them for a while. You need to get out both your anger and your grief. God Bless.

LiveLaughLuv
07-17-2009, 07:54 AM
So sorry for your loss, Heather...:1222423:

My only brother was murdered 26 years ago. He was shot down like an animal left to die in the street. The ambulance did arrive, kept him alive for 30 minutes but a bullet to the heart, lungs 6 shots in all, he didn't have a chance.

It's been 26 years, the pain seems to ease up but never truly goes away. As years pass, many visits to his grave, I've finally gotten to a point where I don't cry hysterically anymore but tears do flow..they always will for my heart aches. No children were left by my brother, my last name ended with his death, no one to carry on our last name...which is why I have incorporated my maiden name with my married name, hyphenated...

No one had ever been held responsible for my brothers death which had me calling the cold case squad at least once a month..That is what hurts the most. My brother never received justice...:give_rose:

As you say Heather, my brother wasn't perfect, had his share of problems but no one deserves to die by another's hand...

Rest Peacefully Louis until we meet again....:1222423:


On his 24th Anniversay, I wrote a poem for him. I've never done this before, the words just seemed to flow so easily...

For My Brother, Louis....

Rest In Peace Louis....today is 24 years since you had been taken from us....something for you little brother..

I remember the day you were born, it was a day of joy,
Sadly, you were taken tragically, you were taken so young,
My heart was full of pain, not able to see the light,
It's been 24 years tho' it seems like last night,
The pain still exists,
They said it would lessen in time, that time heals all wounds,this wound did not heal, I miss you dear, this was not the deal,
Life without you brother is a heavy cross to bear,
No nieces no nephews did you leave,
So alone is my life without you baby brother, boy did I grieve
If I only had one more,
One more hug, one more kiss, one more laugh, one more dance,
I would never let go,
I would hold you and keep you safe in my arms,
I would ask God to give it another chance,
You live strong in my heart, my body, my soul ,
for 24 years your love I still hold,
Until we meet again, brother

I Love you Dear

MissingLukas
10-10-2009, 12:08 AM
I lost my twin brother in a school shooting when we were 14. He was shot down in the main hall, the only one to die that day. He never had a chance, he got 4 shots to the chest. He was shot in a gang fight, that he had no business or affiliation in. He was an innocent caught in the crossfire and the only one to die that day. Every once and a while, I'll sit and wait for him to come home from baseball practice or paint balling and forget he's never coming home. I'm 16 now, our birthday is in less than a week and I just can't bear to believe that he'll never get his drivers licence, never get married, never have kids... The boy that shot him got 20 years. He can apply for parole in about five years. He was just a kid, in the wrong place at the wrong time...I don't know what he did to deserve it.

Livelaughluv- I can't imagine not having justice for my brother. I am so sorry for your loss. Your brother is watching over you now, just know that no matter what happens, a part of him is still with you.

texanne
10-11-2009, 12:05 PM
I have never lost a sibling to murder. However, I am the last surviving sibling in my family. I lost my youngest brother, and my only sister within 5 months of each other. The other two died a year apart about 10 yrs. later. What I want to express was the feeling that overwhelmed me when the first one died. It was as if one piece of a set of china was broken. You still have the china, it is still beautiful....but it is forever incomplete. I knew things would never be the same again. I raged when my sister died very soon afterwards. When things would happen, I felt there was no one to call and lean on...to discuss things with. It was like trying to reach out with your arm and realizing it was not there. How my mother has survived the loss of 4 of her 5 children is beyond me. I lost my own son two weeks before my last brother died. But we go on...we take care of each other. My mother is 91 now, and I think I stay stronger because I know they are all expecting me to look after her. And one good thing came of all of this....I absolutely do not fear death.

LiveLaughLuv
10-12-2009, 07:59 AM
I have never lost a sibling to murder. However, I am the last surviving sibling in my family. I lost my youngest brother, and my only sister within 5 months of each other. The other two died a year apart about 10 yrs. later. What I want to express was the feeling that overwhelmed me when the first one died. It was as if one piece of a set of china was broken. You still have the china, it is still beautiful....but it is forever incomplete.

I lost my own son two weeks before my last brother died. But we go on...we take care of each other. My mother is 91 now, and I think I stay stronger because I know they are all expecting me to look after her. And one good thing came of all of this....I absolutely do not fear death.

I am so sorry for you losses, Texanne. :1222423:

Loosing a child is especially hard, parents are not suppose to bury their children, it's the children who are to bury their parents. I know the day my brother died, my mom died along with him. She succumbed to cancer and died a painful death, 7 years later...

I had to smile at your china description for you hit it right on. It did seem like that one spoke on a wheel missing. It will still roll but with a wobble. I wobbled out of control at the loss of my one and only sibling, feeling abandonded and alone, with no where to turn or how to deal with the feelings of dread..It took my mother to help me over that hurdle by giving me an ultimatum...26 years later and as always, mom did the right thing for me, even as I felt anger and hate in the beginning.


I lost my twin brother in a school shooting when we were 14. He was shot down in the main hall, the only one to die that day. He never had a chance, he got 4 shots to the chest. He was shot in a gang fight, that he had no business or affiliation in. He was an innocent caught in the crossfire and the only one to die that day. Every once and a while, I'll sit and wait for him to come home from baseball practice or paint balling and forget he's never coming home. I'm 16 now, our birthday is in less than a week and I just can't bear to believe that he'll never get his drivers licence, never get married, never have kids... The boy that shot him got 20 years. He can apply for parole in about five years. He was just a kid, in the wrong place at the wrong time...I don't know what he did to deserve it.

I am sorry for your loss MissingLukas...:1222423:

Being a twin and losing your brother must be twice as hard for you share that very special bond that twins have. No one deserves to die as ours did being shot multiple times. Being caught in the crossfire makes it that much worse. Wrong place, wrong time that we can't get back or change.

I too had a hard time in the beginning, even set a place for him at Sunday dinner, forgetting he wasn't coming home. Each time the door bell rang or the phone rang, he was always on my mind. He secretly married his high school sweetheart but never had any children, so I have nothing of him to continue my love. I wish I had a neice or nephew I can spoil and take places. It would make it seem my brother was still here. But again, it won't happen.

I appreciate all the openness in this greif forum, it is bittersweet for me, for I share the same feelings as others as I cry for how they lost a loved one or two.:cray:

texanne
10-12-2009, 02:58 PM
LLL, so sorry about your mom. I understand the part about her dying with him. I told everyone in the first days following my son's death that my grandsons are what it would take to get me through. I knew they needed me....especially the boy he was raising and asked me to look after if anything happened to him. The crazy thing is what I miss the most about my youngest brother....the way we joked together. He was so smart, and you could make a humorous remark that he would "get". He could discuss world events, and make a good joke about them. I miss that.

MissingLukas
10-18-2009, 04:10 PM
It is the 3rd anniversary of my brother's death. He would be 17 as of about 4 days ago. Me and some friends are having a memorial up at his grave. I decided to make a play list of songs just seemed right for the occasion, It was actually very therapeutic.

texanne
10-18-2009, 04:16 PM
That sounds very sweet. I take my grandson to my son's grave from time to time. He sometimes makes little things like Easter docorations, tiny Christmas trees, etc to leave there. I think things like that help the young deal with loss. I wish you peace in your heart.

The best way to honor your brother would be for you to go on and have the best life possible. To do things that he would like to have done...to be successful. That is what he would want for you more than anything....to be happy and fulfilled in your life.