Griefland With Rachel Blatt
When Joanne Levy-Prewitt was nine years old, her father waved at her from a stretcher — a weak wave, his gold wedding ring catching the light and said "bye, baby." He died that night. What followed wasn't just grief. It was decades of learning how to feel it. In this episode of Griefland, host Rachel Blatt talks with her dear friend Joanne about what happens when a child is told to be brave, hold it together, and protect her grieving mother and how eleven years of repression finally cracked open at 20 through an unlikely doorway: a bad boyfriend. What Joanne discovered in therapy changed everything. And what she did with that knowledge, teaching fourth grade for ten years, becoming the mother she wished she'd had is quietly extraordinary. 🎧 Episode Breakdown * 0:00 — Rachel introduces Joanne, who lost her father Morty at age nine to a fatal heart attack * 0:35 — Joanne describes the day her father died: an ambulance at the door, a stretcher in the hallway, and a wave goodbye she never forgot * 2:25 — Waking up to her grandmother wailing outside her bedroom door and knowing before anyone told her * 3:11 — Hundreds of people filling the house for weeks; her parents were childhood sweethearts rooted in a deep, close-knit community * 4:00 — What a nine-year-old understands about death and what she didn't know how to do with the feeling * 4:36 — The message she received from aunts, family friends, and community: "Be brave. Don't cry. You'll make your mother sad." * 5:53 — Returning to school after two weeks; her teacher had told the class; Joanne just wanted to disappear back into normal * 7:04 — Finding her first peer in grief in middle school, her friend Shannon, who lost her father at 11 * 7:41 — The adult language she and a close friend's husband developed: highly competent, highly controlled, always trying not to be caught unawares again * 8:06 — Her mother tried therapy; Joanne refused to talk to the male therapist and eventually won the battle to stop going * 9:12 — At 20, a bad boyfriend's departure triggered a complete meltdown and a therapist who quickly said: "This isn't about him. You've never grieved your father." * 10:03 — The theme of grief returning at 30, and again when her mother died five years ago — and how her father's loss surfaced through it all * 10:17 — Why she almost became a therapist and why she didn't: she couldn't hold everyone else's sadness on top of her own * 11:15 — Becoming a fourth-grade teacher: placed in fourth grade by chance, she spent ten years redoing the year her life changed * 11:52 — One of her students lost her mother suddenly; Joanne agonized over getting it right for her * 13:07 — How losing her father meant losing her whole family, her mother in her grief, her siblings who left, the community that showed up for her mother but not for her * 14:11 — Her mother's friends losing patience for grief: "Why are you still sad? Why aren't you dating?" * 15:15 — What Joanne wishes had existed: group therapy for grieving children, just knowing you're not alone * 17:04 — How losing her father made her hyper-competent and fiercely capable; cooking at ten, fixing roofs and plumbing, becoming someone who doesn't need to be rescued * 19:12 — How that loss shaped how she parented her son: staying up until 1am to listen, owning feelings, never shutting the conversation down * 20:12 — "My mother never would have done that for me. That's why I wanted to do it for him." 📚 References & Resources * Joanne Levy-Prewitt — Rachel's close friend; lost her father Morty at age nine to a fatal heart attack; former fourth-grade teacher; currently runs an education consulting business helping students get into college. 💡 Key Takeaways 1. Telling a grieving child to "be brave" for the surviving parent is its own kind of harm. Joanne was nine years old when adults told her not to cry so she wouldn't make her mother sad. That message didn't protect her, it taught her to bury the loss for over a decade. 2. Repressed grief doesn't disappear. It finds a crack. Joanne's breakdown at 20 had nothing to do with a bad boyfriend and everything to do with a father she'd never properly mourned. Grief will wait as long as it has to. 3. Children who grieve alone often become hyper-competent adults. The need to control, to be capable, to never be caught unawares again. Joanne and her friend Mike share this exact pattern. It's a coping mechanism that looks like strength from the outside. 4. Grief comes back at unexpected moments. Her mother's death five years ago at 89, after a long life, brought Joanne's father rushing back. Early loss doesn't stay in the past; it resurfaces through new losses. 5. The most powerful thing you can do for a grieving child may simply be to witness them. Joanne didn't need perfect therapy or the right words. She needed someone to acknowledge that she had lost something too, not just her mother. 6. We parent in response to what we didn't have. Joanne sat up until 1am with her teenage son because her own mother never would have. Her wound became her greatest strength as a parent. 👤 About Rachel Blatt Rachel Blatt is the host of Griefland, a certified grief educator and a widowed mother of two sons. After losing her husband Dave to cancer in 2022, she began exploring how early loss shapes the people we become, not through clinical frameworks, but through honest conversation. She brings both a personal lens and a parent's vigilance to every episode. 📩 Have a story to share? Follow and message me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/widowtales/]! 👤 About Joanne Levy-Prewitt Joanne Levy-Prewitt is a longtime educator and education consultant who helps students navigate the college admissions process. She lost her father Marty to a fatal heart attack when she was nine years old. After nearly a decade as a fourth-grade teacher, the grade she was in when her father died, she now brings the same attentiveness and emotional intelligence she found in grief to her work with families and students.
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