Anderson Cooper’s reflection on grief: Part 2
Another season on grief

Towards the end of 2023 “60 Minutes” and CNN journalist Anderson Cooper was interviewed on his experience with grief: do we move on from grief, or do we learn to live with it?
The first season of Anderson Cooper’s podcast, “All There Is” was released in 2022 and due to an overwhelming number of people reaching out, leaving him voicemails to share their stories of loss, he decided to produce a second season, which is now available wherever you get your podcasts.
“Grief when it comes, is nothing as we expect,” Anderson Cooper said, quoting Joan Didion during a feature on CBS Sunday Morning.
Anderson is no stranger to death. His mother died in 2019, his brother died by suicide at 21 years old in 1988 and his father passed in 1958 when Anderson was just 10 years old.“The last one who remembers our stories and the life we shared.” He said about himself in the first episode of the second season.
Despite being a journalist for nearly three decades reporting on all types of tragedies across the world, Anderson explains he spent much of his life trying to escape grief, but “never got very far.”
While finishing production of the first season of “All There Is,” Anderson felt overwhelmed by the 1000 plus voice messages he received from listeners and he also stopped going through his family’s things. But, after a bit of a break, he eventually did listen to all his listeners’ stories and decided that he needed to create another season, and he’s started, again, to go through his family’s personal memorabilia: photos, letters, journals, etc.
“Sifting through these boxes–these memories–can be overwhelming and I’m not sure what I’m supposed to do with all of it.” He said in episode one.
Grief can be compounded when faced with these physical representations of our beloved family members: do we keep it all in a box hidden away or throw it in the garbage? Do any of our options feel right? These types of questions are what makes grief a bond between us all, yet we rarely use this universal experience as a way to connect with others around us.
“Instead we shroud our grief inside us.” Anderson said during the CBS interview. “But carrying grief in silence breeds loneliness, and with that loneliness can slowly steal the joy in our lives.” Anderson explained.
In the second season of “All There Is” Anderson talks to a variety of people who have experience different types of grief, including President Joe Biden about losing his wife, Neilia and 13-month-old daughter, Naomi. In episode 3, Anderson speaks to a woman named Katie who lost her daughter when she was 23 weeks pregnant.
Entering the new year, everyone should have the opportunity to no longer feel alone in their grief. Wherever you are, there are people who are grieving and support groups to help you feel less alone. If you are grieving and would like some help in finding support, please feel free to reach out to our Grief Educator, Kim Shute at Memorial Funeral Home.
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