Lili Greer on the trauma of not knowing where her missing mother is
Lili Greer was just 13 when her mother Tina, 32, went out to do the laundry and never came home.
Now 27, Lili said her whole world was 'torn apart in a matter of hours', and has dedicated the years since her disappearance to giving her mum a voice.
Tina Greer was last seen by her family at a Beechmont Rd home on January 18, 2012.
She was intending to visit her abusive then boyfriend Les 'Grumpy' Sharman – a long-term member of the notorious Finks bikie gang.
Sharman was considered a suspect in Ms Greer's disappearance and murder but was never interviewed by police, nor formally charged.
He died in 2018 in a car crash.
Determined to uncover the truth, Lili fought for an inquest, which found in December 2023 that her mum had likely died 'violently' at the hands of her now-dead boyfriend.
'My mum was my best friend. Our life was really complicated and was very difficult at moments but things were looking up for us — we'd gotten a new place and our life was heading into a new chapter,' Lili told news.com.au.
'And, unfortunately, her life was taken from her.
'She was an amazing, very resilient woman. She was so determined to have a great life.'
While Lili knows what likely happened to Ms Greer, her mothers body has never been found, despite multiple searches of remote sections of the surrounding national park.
'I am one of the 'luckier' family members that has a missing loved one because I know that she's not alive,' she explained.
'But that doesn't change the fact I don't know where she is. I still live with that ambiguous loss.'
Every year more than 56,000 people are reported to Australian police as missing, of those, 2700 are gone for more than 90 days and are classed as 'long-term'.
Appearing on latest SBS Insight episode titled Gone Missing Lili explains the horrific impact on family members who have a loved one go missing, revealing many are forced to take on the role of advocate because they feel it's their job — something she said they shouldn't have to do.
'The hard thing about it — families with missing loved ones are still in it every day, it doesn't matter if it's a decade ago. It's the nature of ambiguous loss,' Lili said.
'It's a cycle of grief that's never ending. Just because time has past, it doesn't necessarily change the mental anguish that it causes.'
The lasting impact on Lili has seen her forge a career out of helping other families of missing people, as she now works as a family liaison officer for the The Missed Foundation.
The organisation was started by Loren O'Keeffe, the sister of long term missing person Daniel O'Keeffe, who went missing in 2011, prompting a nationwide search that ended in March 2016 with the devastating discovery of his suicide.
The Missed Foundation was founded 18 months after Mr O'Keeffe went missing to highlight the gaps in support and help loved ones navigate the traumatic ordeal that is ambiguous loss.
Lili said the issue is getting worse, estimating there has been a 40 per cent increase in the number of missing people in Australia since 2019.
'The numbers are continuing to rise and we have no commitment from the government, and the impact is lifelong if the loved one isn't found,' she told news.com.au.
'If they are found, it's never the outcome you hope for.
'I think we need to see significant investment in this space, because the impact on people's health — physically and mentally — and the communities.'
She said, at a minimum, for every missing person at least 12 people are impacted by their disappearance, adding that the issue is so far reaching and so often overlooked.
While there is support available, organisations such as The Missed Foundation need funding in order to keep helping people.
This is where the government should step in, Lili said.
She added that because going missing isn't a crime, it often means that families can't access support such as victims services — which provides psychological and financial assistance.
Lili said she sat in this category until the coroner's report more than a decade after her mum's disappearance.
'Even just the time it takes — the administrative burden. People will quit their job in search for their missing loved one,' she said.
'It's so different for every person, but it's so difficult and it doesn't need to be this hard. For instance, if there is no death certificate you can't access their bank account. You're still getting their mail to your house. What do you do with their things?
'It's all these forgotten about traumas loved ones have to face. You can imagine how difficult it is when you're getting your loved one's mail to your house still, and you can't stop it and you have to go through an uphill battle to stop it.'
She said when she used to seek professional help, many medical professionals aren't equipped to deal with it.
Lili said the biggest takeaway from sharing her story on SBS Insight was learning that that 'missing' can mean different things.
'For instance, there is lost contact — which is when the person hasn't been reported as missing to police but the family has lost contact,' she said.
'But the experience of those who have a long term missing loved one is vastly different to the other categories that are discussed in the show.'
For those wanting to help those struggling after a loved-one goes missing, she urged well-wishers to take caution, stating it's easy to cause damage during such a difficult time.
'I would encourage everyone to take a great deal of care and consideration when it comes to someone who has a missing loved one,' she said.
For instance, Lili said she's regularly asked what she thinks happened to her mum, something that already keeps her up at night. She added speculation doesn't help.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
30 minutes ago
- ABC News
Domestic violence workers criticise NT government's response to inquest into deaths of Aboriginal women
Domestic violence prevention advocates have described the NT government's criticism of a landmark coronial report into the deaths of four Indigenous women as hurtful, disappointing and distressing. Warning: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the names and images of Indigenous people who have died, used with the permission of their families. Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's final report into the NT's domestic violence epidemic was delivered in November last year. Specifically, the coroner investigated the deaths of Kumarn Rubuntja, Kumanjayi Haywood, Ngeygo Ragurrk and Miss Yunupiŋu, with the inquiry taking more than a year. Judge Armitage made 35 recommendations, including calls for increased funding for frontline emergency service responses, women's shelters and men's behavioural change programs. When tabling the government's response on Tuesday, Domestic Violence Prevention Minister Robyn Cahill said the coroner's recommendations were overall "uninspiring", and said the report "failed dismally to hit the mark". She said the government would support 21 recommendations in full, 11 in principle, and reject three. She also claimed 24 of the 35 recommendations related to programs or processes already in place. Domestic violence researcher Chay Brown, who was friends with Ms Rubuntja before she was murdered in front of Alice Springs Hospital, said she was saddened by Ms Cahill's comments. "I feel very sad about it and I think that's because Kumarn Rubuntja was a friend and a colleague of mine," she said. "She's dearly loved and incredibly missed and so to hear Minister Cahill describe the coronial inquest into her death as uninspiring, as failing to deliver, as being dismal — that was incredibly hurtful." Dr Brown also said Ms Cahill's response had caused harm to the families of the four women. "[They] gave so generously to that whole [coronial] process," she said. "That's what has been forgotten, is that at the heart of the inquest were four women who were loved. "Those four families … who travelled to Darwin, who spoke up, whose voices have been silenced because of the government response. Dr Brown said she and the four families supported the coroner and appreciated the inquest process. "I refuse to allow the process to be undermined by a few ill-thought-through words and hurtful comments in parliament that came about political point-scoring and shifting blame and taking cheap shots," she said. "I refuse to let the process be undermined by that." Ana Aitcheson, the chief executive of Darwin women's shelter Dawn House, said the government's response "came as quite a surprise" given the sector was initially hopeful the inquest would lead to genuine reform. "We saw it as an opportunity for us to all truly work together and really create change in this space," she said. In a joint statement, a group of frontline domestic, family and sexual violence services said none of them had been given notice the government planned to table its response to the coronial inquest on Monday. NT Council of Social Services (NTCOSS) chief executive Sally Sievers said this meant family members of the deceased were unable to attend. "There was no notice so those families couldn't be brought together," she said. If you need help immediately call emergency services on triple-0 Ms Sievers also said the sector was disappointed by an overall lack of consultation regarding the government's response to the coroner's report. "We've got 35-odd members who work in this sector and they just haven't been part of this process," she said. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday morning, Attorney-General Marie-Clare Boothby insisted the government had been working with the sector. "I do refute the allegation that we haven't been consulting with that sector," she said. "Not only has Minister Cahill been out speaking to many of them over the last 11 months … I, too, meet with them."

ABC News
30 minutes ago
- ABC News
Man dies in light plane crash north of Balranald in south-west NSW
A man has died in a plane crash in south-west New South Wales. At about 2pm on Wednesday, emergency services were called to D-Block Road north of Balranald, about 130 kilometres west of Hay, after reports that a light plane had crashed. On arrival, emergency crews found a man in a critical condition. NSW Paramedics provided treatment but he died at the scene. The man was the sole traveller in the plane. He is yet to be formally identified but is believed to be aged in his 50s. Police have established a crime scene and a report will be prepared for the coroner. The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) will investigate the cause of the crash.

News.com.au
40 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Sydney woman found three days after alleged kidnapping during home invasion
A 42-year old woman was allegedly kidnapped during a home invasion in Sydney's southwest on Sunday.