logo
A child psychologist unpacks collective grief after the Texas flood tragedy

A child psychologist unpacks collective grief after the Texas flood tragedy

Fast Company11-07-2025
In the early morning hours of high summer's holiday, July 4, a Southern summer camp became the site of tragedy: At Camp Mystic in Central Texas, flash flooding from a rapidly rising Guadalupe River claimed the lives of 27 people, many of them young girls. Among them were eight-year-old twin sisters.
As waters rose in the middle of the night, counselors wrote girls' names on their arms in case the worst-case scenario happened.
Some campers tried to hold hands.
Some didn't make it.
It's the kind of story that splits your heart open, especially if you're a parent packing your daughter's trunk, labeling her socks, and reminding her to write. You let your child go just a little, trusting the world to hold her.
'To any parent who sends their child to overnight camp, this is unfathomable,' says Toronto-based perinatal and child psychologist Tanya Cotler, Ph.D., who currently has two children at overnight camp. 'The words 'I can't imagine it' come to mind—and yet we can imagine it, and it is our greatest fear.'
One of the most common sentiments we've heard from parents right now is 'I can't stop thinking about those girls.' But how do we sit with the pain, without letting it swallow us, and how do we stay soft without hardening when the world feels anything but safe? Here, Cotler walks us through 'collective grief' in parenthood, including how to channel it into healing action and support those walking through the deepest pain of all: losing a child.
Two Truths (TT): We're seeing a lot of moms struggle with the dichotomy of witnessing this ongoing collective tragedy while also trying to be present and joyful with their children. How can we hold both?
Tanya Cotler, Ph.D. (TC): Collective grief is the emotional response that occurs when we experience a tragic event as a shared humanity. We feel sorrow as a community, as a nation, and as a world together, and that is exactly what we would expect. Even though it is so painful, it's valid and it's deeply human.
One of the most important things is validating and normalizing what parents are feeling so that they don't feel shame. It's okay to feel impacted even when you don't know the victims personally; grief can still find its way in. That seems simple, but it's actually one of the most important ways to cope: We cope via connection. The pain and anxiety of grief expand and multiply in aloneness. 'Grieve' is a verb, and one of the necessary steps is: What can I do?
TT: Let's follow that thread. What can we do when experiencing collective grief?
TC: We may journal to express sorrow. We might write letters—even if you don't know a grieving parent personally—as a way to release emotions. If you know someone who has been impacted, you can reach out. The power of showing up is that we also heal in the process. We can also connect with someone who understands, or speak to a therapist who can validate how difficult it is to witness all this tragedy in our world.
We should also manage our exposure to what we're seeing and take breaks from social media and other forms of media. Images are very hard for the mind to unsee, and watching images repeatedly on a screen can increase anxiety; you're sitting pretty helplessly and passively just consuming.
In aloneness, these feelings grow and expand. In connection, they can settle.
We want to lean into ways to cope with that helplessness and hopefulness; that is the action-based part of grief.
Because grieve is a verb, actions are important, such as donating to relief funds, providing supplies to displaced families, and sending compassionate and loving messages to those who have been impacted. All of that can be immensely helpful, especially at times when we feel potentially helpless and hopeless.
Land of Lovies is a group that helps match children who may have lost beloved lovies with replacements provided by donors. Another group, The Lost Stuffy Project, is trying to connect with every family that's been affected by the flooding in Texas. Losing a transitional object, such as a lovie, can be one of the most emotionally gripping experiences for a child. At an unsafe time, it can make the child feel even more unsafe, like they have lost their anchor. Being matched to help another parent find a lovie is a meaningful experience that can provide a small, tangible way to take action.
TC: This is the space where anxiety lives: between what we can and can't control, the known and unknown. One of the hardest parts of being human and a parent is learning how to live in the both/and, what we are able to know and what we don't know, and what we can predict and what we cannot. We must have compassion for how hard it is to exist in this binary.
When we focus on what we can control in grief, it can ease anxiety, and that can help when we're sending our children out into the world. Orienting in the present can be helpful. You might say, I am safe now. My children are safe now.
Rituals around routine and reunion can help; when I say goodbye to my child(ren), I say, 'I will see you soon. Mommy always comes back.'
Of course, that voice in the back of your mind might be, but that didn't happen at Mystic, and that's where we move to grief. Guilt can emerge here, too, specifically the guilt that my child is okay, and these children were not.
Guilt gives us something to control—but by blaming ourselves, our survivorship, or our children's, we're misusing it. Beneath guilt is often helplessness and heartbreak. We might need to allow ourselves to just feel that, without shutting it down, and validate the feeling. Permission to feel (without trying to fix) is one of the most powerful ways to cope. We can channel this into action when we have the space and capacity.
TT: How do we connect with and support those directly impacted by this tragedy?
TC: For parents carrying the most shattering grief of all—those grieving the loss of a child—this is a pain that will forever form the fabric of their being, but they will learn to bend as they break. They will learn to soften around it.
When I support someone through the grief of losing a child, I remind them that I will continue to show up and be with them in their hardest, biggest, and most unbearable feelings.
We learn to live in moments—to help them get their feet out of bed, to help them stand up, or to eat one meal. At first, it's how do I get through this minute, this hour, this day?
Most importantly, we let them continue to talk about the person they love and lost, to tell their story, and to be witnessed. When possible, we share our own memories of the person. We say their name. We allow the person to feel felt and known.
We are so scared as humans to say the wrong thing or to sit at the bottom of the ditch with someone who is really in pain. We want to protect the other person, we want to protect ourselves. But this is what those grieving need: They need authentic emotion; they need to be asked again and again how they are. We won't find words to fix it—that's why people say, 'there are no words.' It's not words that people need. In the face of unspeakable loss, our presence helps redistribute the weight of grief so it isn't carried alone. We must remember the importance and power of bearing witness: simply being there.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brother of teen who died in Fort Lauderdale watercraft crash describes desperate attempt to save her
Brother of teen who died in Fort Lauderdale watercraft crash describes desperate attempt to save her

CBS News

time2 hours ago

  • CBS News

Brother of teen who died in Fort Lauderdale watercraft crash describes desperate attempt to save her

A family from New York is mourning the loss of a vibrant daughter who lost her life in a personal watercraft accident in Fort Lauderdale. The parents of 14-year-old Rachel Nisanov surprised her with a trip to South Florida as a graduation present. Her brother, Yonah Nisanov, said she was most excited to go on a personal watercraft. Tuesday afternoon, the family rented personal watercraft to go cruising on the Intracoastal Water. Rachel Nisanov was on one with her sister, 16-year-old Aviva. Their mother, father and Rabbi Shlomo Nisanov were right behind them. Yonah Nisanov said his sister Aviva was in the front of a personal watercraft, with their sister behind her, when she hit a dock in the area of NE 24th Court and Bayview Drive. "My father doesn't even know how to swim," Yonah Nisanov said. "He jumped in. My sisters were unconscious. Their life jackets were on. They were lying flat, and my father jumped in and scraped up his hands, his feet and his back all over to save them, and he did what he could." Both teens were taken to Broward Health Medical Center where Rachel Nisanov died. Her sister underwent surgery Tuesday night and remained sedated Wednesday morning. "They're going to try to wake her up soon and see how she's doing," Yonah Nisanov said. "But right now, she's sedated." He described Rachel as someone who found joy in helping others. "She was a very kind person," he said. "She always babysat for my kids. Not only babysitting, she used to come and just clean up the whole house and, like, what else can I do? And always wanting to do more." The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said the cause of the crash is still under investigation, but Yonah Nisanov said it appears they may have lost control before hitting the dock. "We thank everybody for all the support, all the family and friends that are reaching out. It's very, very heartwarming, heartfelt," Yonah Nisanov said. Rabbi Shlomo Nissanov is well known in the Jewish community in New York for helping others. He operates a food pantry. "He's the first number, you know, someone once made a joke "before calling 911, call Rabbi Shlomo'," Nisanov said.

Migrant boat capsizes off Italy and leaves at least 20 people dead, UN says
Migrant boat capsizes off Italy and leaves at least 20 people dead, UN says

Washington Post

time6 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Migrant boat capsizes off Italy and leaves at least 20 people dead, UN says

ROME — A boat carrying nearly 100 migrants capsized Wednesday off the Italian island of Lampedusa, killing at least 20 people and leaving another dozen missing, the U.N. refugee agency said. Sixty survivors have been brought to a center in Lampedusa, said a UNHCR spokesman in Italy, Filippo Ungaro. According to survivor accounts, there were 92 to 97 migrants on board when the boat departed Libya. Authorities have recovered 20 bodies, and were searching for another 12 to 17 survivors, according to the UNHCR. It was not immediately known how long the migrants had been at sea. According to the UNHCR, 675 migrants have died making the perilous central Mediterranean crossing so far this year, not counting the latest sinking.

Proposed Texas reservoir continues to hang over landowners' heads after 50 years
Proposed Texas reservoir continues to hang over landowners' heads after 50 years

CBS News

time17 hours ago

  • CBS News

Proposed Texas reservoir continues to hang over landowners' heads after 50 years

For cattle rancher Eddie Belcher, his family's 900-acre plot of land in Northeast Texas is everything. The land has been owned by Belcher's family for seven generations. Although Belcher has lived in and visited cities across the country, he said nothing compares to his home in Bogata, Texas. "I can't put into words what it's like to be raised the way we were raised," Belcher said. "This land grows on you." Belcher built a log cabin on his land, complete with a bar named after his late father. He built it even though he knows that at some point in the next few decades, the entire area could be underwater. The proposed Marvin Nichols Reservoir has been hanging over the heads of residents in Red River and Titus Counties for more than half a century. First introduced in the state's water plan in 1968, the reservoir would flood 66,000 acres of the Sulphur River Basin. Building it would require private landowners, like Belcher, to sell their land. "I decided this is where I was going to build my house regardless," Belcher said. "I took the chance that we would beat this." Even though the project was first proposed 57 years ago, construction hasn't started on the Marvin Nichols Reservoir. It's a fact that landowners, including Belcher, said has left the region in a sort of limbo. "We see that with the threat of the lake over the land for decades now, many of the regional ranches have fallen into disrepair," Belcher's neighbor and cattle rancher, Dr. Jim Marshall, said. "People sort of lost hope." But Dan Buhman, general manager of the Tarrant Regional Water District, said the fact that the reservoir hasn't been built is a sign of the progress that's been made in water conservation. "We conserve, and that pushes the need out, and so that is a win," Buhman said. "Obviously, they don't want us to come and build the lake tomorrow. And our customers, the rate payers, the people who pay their water bill, don't want us to go build an expensive supply before it's needed." But Buhman, who also chairs the Region C Water Planning Area, said there will be a day when it will have to be built. The $7 billion project is an integral part of the region's water planning strategy in the future. "We have looked at it every way to Sunday and said, can we conserve our way out of this growth?" Buhman said. "It's just not possible. The math says you need the water supplies." Although critics call reservoirs outdated and inefficient, Buhman said they continue to be an important part of Region C's water supply in the future. "Reservoirs are not an outdated strategy," Buhman said. "Absolutely, we see evaporation, that is part of the equation for a reservoir, there's no question about it. But when you compare it to all the other possibilities, they capture the water in the spring and they supply it in August when there isn't any. And that is exactly what we need." Eighty percent of the proposed reservoir's water would go to Region C, which includes the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Twenty percent would remain in Region D. Today, Texas is home to about 31 million people. By 2070, that's expected to grow to more than 50 million. The state's rapid growth has helped create a water shortage crisis. "The Texas Water Development Board... their data shows, not to be alarming, but towns and cities could face a severe water shortage by 2030, if we continue with severe, prolonged drought and if there are no water solutions implemented throughout the state," said Alejandra Martinez, the Texas Tribune's environmental reporter. A water shortage isn't just a public health risk. Without action toward increasing the state's water supply, a severe drought could cause $153 billion in economic damages annually, according to an estimate in the Texas Water Development Board's 2022 water plan. "This session, Gov. Greg Abbott put out really early on that he wanted a Texas-size investment for water supply projects," Martinez said. "So this session, there was a big investment made towards water, $20 billion worth of investment, one of the biggest investments made by the Texas Legislature for water supply for the whole state. How that money will be distributed throughout the state is yet to be seen." While $20 billion is a sizable investment, some experts say it isn't enough. The nonprofit Texas 2036 estimates the state needs to spend about $154 billion to secure its water supply in the coming decades. "Water experts I talked to say this was a significant step forward," Martinez said. "But they also said, in that same vein, this is just a down payment." Those opposed to the Marvin Nichols Reservoir are holding out hope Region C finds alternative water solutions, even as efforts to kill the project have so far failed. "It's not that the people of Northeast Texas want to harm the people of Dallas-Fort Worth," said state Rep. Gary VanDeaver of New Boston. "They want to see the entire state thrive and continue to grow, and certainly a big piece of that is having adequate water. But what the people of Northeast Texas do want to make sure that people understand is we deserve our livelihood as well." VanDeaver introduced a bill that would have killed the reservoir project. It ultimately failed. In June, the Texas Water Development Board found that an interregional conflict exists between Regions C and D regarding the reservoir. The two groups met for mediation and came to an agreement that requires Region C to study another water supply strategy alongside Marvin Nichols. A new study comparing the projects would have to begin by March 2026. The agreement also requires that no application for permitting would occur for Marvin Nichols before 2030. Region D Water Planning Group will discuss and consider ratification of the agreement Wednesday. Region C will do the same on Oct. 6. All of this leaves families like the Belchers and Marshalls wondering if and when they will be forced to sell their land. "The land would lose everything," Marshall said. "The community would be gone forever, and all of this wonder we see out here in nature would literally be drowned." Belcher said he'll continue to do what he can to oppose the project and honor his mother's wish that the land not be sold. "There's not a price for this land," Belcher said. "You can't put a price on seven generations.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store