A raw, hopeful conversation about living after suicide loss and the everyday ways we find our way back to ourselves. Jessica sits down with Jenna Jones from AFSP Arkansas to remember her dad with honesty and warmth, unpack the guilt and questions that trail a death by suicide, and highlight the practices that make recovery feel possible again. We walk through age-appropriate language for kids, why play and routine are powerful after trauma, and how the brain often processes grief during mundane tasks like grocery runs and camp days.
Jenna shares how years after her loss, perfectionism and people-pleasing pushed her into therapy, where she uncovered abandonment wounds she didn’t have words for at fourteen. The lesson isn’t “grieve faster,” it’s “right timing”: when therapy feels too heavy, movement, sunlight, and simple routines can steady the nervous system until deeper work is doable. We also get practical about supporting survivors at work, using the loved one’s name, offering flexibility around hard dates and holidays, and resisting the urge to ask for morbid details. Real care means checking capacity, not pushing stories, and sitting in silence when silence is needed.
Across it all, we name and dismantle harmful myths. Suicide isn’t weakness or selfishness; it’s often the illness convincing someone they’re a burden. That lie isn’t reality. Preserving memory through shared stories, notes, and laughter honors the whole person, not just their final moment. And for anyone standing on the edge: never give up. Life is better with you in it. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share it with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find their way to hope.
If you are in an crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.
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