Grief Out Loud

A Mother's Legacy, A Daughter's Grief - N'keya Peters-Camille

45 min · 1 mei 2026
aflevering A Mother's Legacy, A Daughter's Grief - N'keya Peters-Camille artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode of Grief Out Loud, Jana is joined by N'keya Peters-Camille [https://www.hopesdaughter.com/about], LCSW, RYT® 200, a social worker, certified Grief Yoga teacher, facilitator for e-motion [https://www.emotion-mc.org/] grief meet ups, and creator of Hope: A One Line A Day Journal for the Bereaved [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CZJH6W4W]. N'keya shares the story of her mother, Hope - a woman she describes as her soulmate - who died of pancreatic cancer in 2021 at the age of 46. N'keya reflects on growing up alongside her mother, witnessing her overcome immense challenges, and experiencing firsthand what it meant to be deeply seen, supported, and loved. After her mother's death, N'keya found herself navigating grief without strong cultural or community rituals to hold her. In response, she created her own network of support through grief counseling, retreats, movement practices, and eventually, offering those same resources to others - particularly within her Afro-Caribbean and African American communities. The conversation explores caregiving during the pandemic, the absence of end-of-life conversations, and what it means to grieve while parenting young children. N'keya shares how she spoke honestly with her three-year-old son about death, how grief continues to evolve five years later, and how she makes space for both sorrow and joy - especially on complex days like Mother's Day. N'keya also speaks candidly about pregnancy loss and infertility following her mother's death and how those grief experiences intersected. She describes how her mother's voice continues to guide her—in her work, her parenting, and her sense of self—and how she honors that connection by living fully, while also deeply grieving. Note: this episode mentions childhood sexual assault. Please take care while listening. In this episode, you'll hear about: * Grieving the death of a parent while raising young children * The impact of limited cultural grief rituals and creating your own * Movement, community, and storytelling as grieving practices * Navigating Mother's Day while holding multiple losses * Pregnancy loss, infertility, and layered grief experiences * Maintaining an ongoing bond with someone who has died N'keya Peters-Camille, LCSW, RYT® 200, is a Social Worker and Grief Educator who integrates clinical support with somatic healing. Her work is deeply rooted in her own grief history—from navigating the death of her beloved mother, Hope, to the profound challenges of miscarriage and the complexities of IVF and IUI. As an African American woman born and raised in Brooklyn with Caribbean roots, N'keya is dedicated to bringing meaningful grief support to her community. Certified in Grief Yoga, she believes that grief is often too heavy to carry alone and too deep to process through words alone. In addition to her private practice, she serves as a volunteer with E-Motion, facilitating 6–8 week grief movement groups. By blending clinical social work with somatic movement and meditation, N'keya provides a "soft landing" for those walking the path of loss—helping them bridge the gap between mind and body, find their breath again, and carry their loved ones' legacies forward. Want to learn more about supporting children and teens who are grieving? Sign up for our online courses here: https://classes.dougy.org/ [https://classes.dougy.org/]

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aflevering Brothers In Grief: Nora Gross On Cumulative Loss & Gun Violence artwork

Brothers In Grief: Nora Gross On Cumulative Loss & Gun Violence

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aflevering It's All Hard - Sudden vs Anticipated Loss artwork

It's All Hard - Sudden vs Anticipated Loss

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18 jun 202651 min
aflevering How to Talk With Children About Grief & Loss artwork

How to Talk With Children About Grief & Loss

How do you talk with children about death, dying, and grief - especially when the truth feels impossible to say? Most adults feel unprepared to tell a child that someone in their life has an advanced serious illness or has died. There's often a deep desire to protect kids from pain, avoid overwhelming them, or wanting to wait until there's a "better" time to talk. But children often already sense that something has changed. In this episode, Jana is joined by Dougy Center colleagues Rebecca Hobbs-Lawrence, M.A. and Sat Kaur Khalsa, M.S.W. to talk about how adults can approach these conversations with honesty, clarity, and compassion. Rebecca, Dougy Center's Pathways Program and Grief Services Coordinator, and Sat Kaur, Dougy Center's Family Services Coordinator, bring decades of professional experience supporting grieving children and families. They also share how their own childhood experiences of grief shaped the way they talk with kids about loss today. Together, they explore how to tell children someone has died using concrete, age-appropriate language, why grief conversations don't need to happen all at once, and how adults can respond when children ask difficult questions about blame, uncertainty, and why someone died. They also discuss how to talk with children about deaths that are often stigmatized, including suicide, homicide, and substance-related deaths, and why withholding information can sometimes create more fear and confusion. Whether you're a parent, caregiver, clinician, educator, or simply someone supporting a those who are grieving, this conversation offers practical guidance and reassurance for navigating some of the hardest conversations. We discuss: * Why honesty and clear language matter when talking with kids about death * How to explain death in concrete, age-appropriate ways * Why grief conversations are never one-and-done * Supporting children when someone has an advanced serious illness * How to respond when kids blame themselves for a death * Talking about suicide, homicide, and substance-related deaths without shame * Why adults don't need perfect words - just presence and openness Resources: Dougy Center's full collection of Tip Sheets and Activities: https://www.dougy.org/grief-support-resources [https://www.dougy.org/grief-support-resources] Grief education & training offerings: https://www.dougy.org/professionals-trainings [https://www.dougy.org/professionals-trainings]

12 jun 20261 h 9 min
aflevering What Happens When You Stop Outrunning Grief? Camila Crews & Sorry For Your Loss (Cards) artwork

What Happens When You Stop Outrunning Grief? Camila Crews & Sorry For Your Loss (Cards)

Have you ever found yourself trying to outrun grief? That's what Camila Crews [https://www.sorryforyourlosscards.com/aboutus] did when she was 19 and her mother died. Twenty years later, following the heartbreaking disappearance and death of her father, Camila stopped running and started feeling. Unable to just keep pushing through, she had to face her grief and learn how to care for herself in the process. Facing her grief inspired Camila to start Sorry for Your Loss (Cards) [https://www.sorryforyourlosscards.com/], an initiative to help people better understand grief and show up for those who are mourning. Centering the experiences of Black and Brown communities, Sorry for Your Loss (Cards) provides workshops [https://www.sorryforyourlosscards.com/workshops], cards, resources [https://www.sorryforyourlosscards.com/cardsandfree], and community experiences designed to decrease the isolation that so often accompanies grief. We discuss: * The fiery, creative energy Camila's parents shared * Losing her mother twice: first as a child when her mother moved away, and then as a young adult when she died * The instinct to just keep moving forward after her mother's death * Having to slow down and finally face grief after her father was killed * Living with the unanswered questions surrounding her father's disappearance and presumed death * The vital importance of culturally specific grief resources * Finding connection with other people who are grieving * The origin of Sorry for Your Loss (Cards) and Camila's commitment to helping others understand grief Camila A. Crews builds tools, experiences, and cultural conversations that help people show up for grief in real, tangible ways. After losing both of her parents over the course of two decades, she experienced firsthand how lonely grief can feel and how often people want to support others but don't know how. The purpose of Sorry For Your Loss is to help people get familiar with grief before it overwhelms them or someone they love. Since founding Sorry For Your Loss, Camila has developed therapist endorsed grief support tools and facilitated workshops based on her frameworks at wellness and mental health summits. Before building her own platform, Camila held public relations leadership roles shaping multicultural campaigns for global brands including Apple TV+, Netflix, and Universal Pictures. She blends storytelling, empathy, and lived experience to create meaningful tools for grief, connection, and community. Follow on IG [https://www.instagram.com/sorryforyourlosscards/] - @sorryforyourlosscards

4 jun 202646 min
aflevering When "It's Not Your Fault" Falls Flat - Grief & Guilt artwork

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