Stuff You Should Know - How Grief Works
Episode Date: April 4, 2013You can probably name the five stages of grief - from denial to acceptance - they've become pretty well known since being proposed in 1969. But later researchers are finding that grief is rarely that ...cut and dried, and it may not be as widely experienced as we once thought. Join Josh and Chuck as they look at the sad science of grief. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
That makes this stuff you should know, the podcast. Good grief. Yes, good grief. I looked that up.
What'd you come up with? Well, it just struck me, you know, because Charlie Brown says it,
you know, that's where I know it from. Then I thought, where did that come from? Because
I wonder those things. And it's just, apparently, they think it's just what's called a minced oath,
like when you substitute God for good gravy or good googly's.
I got you. Great googly moogly. Great googly moogly. But then I thought grief was weird,
because that's such a specific thing. But then good gracious, gracious is very specific, too.
Yeah. And like ill-fitting. So I guess it's just a minced oath. Good grief.
Well, maybe good gracious came from good grace. And somebody was like,
just feeling a little buzzed on schnapps. And they added gracious instead. Maybe so.
Minst oaths. Good gravy. That's good. That's probably the funniest thing that will happen
in this show. Hopefully. That wasn't even that funny. Yeah. But this one's not supposed to be
funny. It's about grief, you know? Yeah. And I think we should point out from the get-go,
that this is about grief, human grief, Western human grief. Yeah. But that's not to say that
there aren't different types of grief and that humans are the only ones who do grief. In fact,
I have a story for you. Yeah, I got a little anal action, too, so. Oh, you do.
That was the funniest thing in this episode. This story took place back in the spring of 1999
in Uttar Pradesh State, India, specifically in the town of Lucknow. And even more specifically at
the Prince of Wales Zoo. Okay. There was a 72-year-old elephant, female elephant named Dominie.
Uh-huh. And Dominie was hanging out in her little house at the Prince of Wales Zoo when all of a
sudden she got a younger pregnant friend delivered to her named Chumpakali. Chumpakali was, as I
said, pregnant. She was actually on maternity leave from her regular gig where she would just let
tourists ride on her back. Okay. All right. And so she was taking the Prince of Wales Zoo to
basically just have a nice comfortable term and then give birth. And Dominie just fell in love
with Chumpakali. This is so sad already. So she basically became a maternal figure to Chumpakali.
They were best friends. Chumpakali would lay around and Dominie would stroke her pregnant belly
with her trunk. They just got really, really tight, which is very normal in the elephant world.
Yeah. So you can almost imagine that Dominie was growing excited as Chumpakali got closer and
closer to her due date. And when finally she did go into labor, Chumpakali died during childbirth
and gave birth to a stillborn calf. And Dominie, I guess they let her come in and like, you know,
hang around the body because elephants are known to grieve. Yeah. Well, even as far as elephants
go, Dominie's story is a little, it's pretty bad. She cried over the body for a while and then went
over to her enclosure and just stood still for a week. Right? You're killing me. After the week,
during this week, she stopped eating. She got to the point where her legs swelled from basically
starvation and dehydration until she fell over. And then she just laid there for what turned
out to be the rest of her life where she wept and refused to eat and refused to drink and
grieved over the death of her friend and finally died herself a few days later. And the vets tried
to keep her alive. They did what they could, but they said in the end, in the face of Dominie's
intense grief, all her treatment failed. Geez. No, they're buried next to one another.
I had a dog situation like that similar when I was a kid. Yeah. One of my dogs died and
they were best buds. And the other one just like was never the same and died about three months
later and seemed healthy at the time. And I went out and laid down in the doghouse and cried. Nice.
When I was like seven. That's devastating. That's a wonderful thing to do. That's working out your
grief. Yeah. But as far as the animals go, it really is pretty evenly divided among scientists
to say, yes, they show all the signs of grieving and that's what they're doing. And then others that
say, no, they are not grieving. We are putting that on them as humans. Yeah. That's I totally
disagree with that. Yeah. It's just, you know, it's really two camps. We've talked about this before.
Yeah. We've run up against this before. And I don't think either one of us have changed our
positions at all. I think they grieve. But then you hear like this one great ape, you know, was
famous recently for carrying her little dead baby around for like three days. Right. And other
scientists came out and said, like, you know, this is a long gestation period. They have singletons.
Having a kid is a big deal. And so she's carrying this baby around in hopes that it will come back
to life. And it's like in a comatose state. And you know, it's a practical, adaptive evolutionary
thing that's happening. It's not grief. And then I think you're heartless. Right. Yeah. They're grieving
because chimpanzees don't grieve. They took the baby chimp and made a purse out of it.
That's what the scientists did after that. Well, but then for animals, I don't want to get too
sidetracked. But you have to think like when some clearly show signs of what looks like grief,
and some don't at all, like the chimpanzee in the same, you know, arena,
like they eat other chimpanzees while they're still alive and screaming.
Well, those are the ones that backtalk or they go off to die by themselves and there's no grieving,
or they will make like if one of them is dying, they will like kill them. Right. But imagine,
imagine you're an outside observer of the human species. We, we lose chemical weapons on one
another. And yet we still have funeral practices. I mean, it's interesting. I wonder why certain
animals do and certain don't though, you know, yeah, it's very interesting. Well, getting back to
humans, the human realm of grief, there was a man who recently was married to his wife for 62 years
and she died. And on the way to her funeral, he died in the back of the limousine. Oh, really?
And yeah, which I thought was incredibly sweet. And then his, his daughters,
I died at the funeral. No, no, no. They, they put a sign up. They decided to just have a double
funeral and they put a sign up at the wake that said surprise, it's a double header and then
buried him next to her like that day. Well, I guess their family has a good sense of humor at
least. But the point is, is yeah, that is that's a, that's they use a sense of humor to grieve or
else they weren't going through grief. And the point of that whole thing is, is that there's no
set way that grief works, which is great because we can say just about anything here and still be
in the right because psychology is still grappling to define the process of grief. And some very
recent studies that you found show that grief is not present in everyone and that everyone deals
with it very differently. And there's not really any specific way to handle it. There's just some
great general guidelines and that we should say grief is a very personal thing. Yeah. And I myself
have experienced the spectrum of grief in my life, like including, you know, like family members
passing away, not to be too cold, but some are, you know, you super grief for and some it's like,
well, you know, they were very old and they had a great life and we saw this coming. And that's
one of the things that, you know, it's one of the types of grief anticipatory grief. Right. They
say is probably easier because you're working that stuff out over time. And it's nothing like
an accident or a child dying on anticipated grief. Well, completely different. Yeah, it is. So you
say you mentioned anticipatory grief. That's like if somebody's got a prolonged illness or
something like that, you have the chance to say goodbye ahead of time, maybe deal with these
emotions. Exactly. And then once death actually comes, you've been prepared for this for days,
weeks, months. Right. Yeah. And a lot of times maybe there isn't any quote unquote traditional
grief going on at all because you're just so prepared. Right. And it's just a matter of executing
all the things that you need to do if you're the person that's in charge of that kind of stuff.
Right. Like you're so prepared, you blow off the funeral, they go to the grocery store.
I don't know about that.
Might be a serial killer if that's the case. Psychologists call that kind of grief anticipatory
grief, basically the money grief, because it's about as light as you can get. Sure.
Post grief, post death, I should say. Right. Yes. And then again, I want to say there's
probably a listener out there who helped their husband or their mother through a long bout of
cancer that the person finally succumbed to. That's absolutely untrue. I agree with you whole
heartedly. Like there again, there's no specific like no one can tell you what your grief was.
Again, it's personal. This is just, these are very broad strokes. So okay. Then like you mentioned,
uh, unanticipated grief. Right. Yeah, I meant that's, from my experience, I had a friend that
fell off a building and died. And that's like, definitely the hardest someone young and accident
and, uh, but still, if you want to talk about five stages, I'm not a big believer that that's
the case because I didn't experience all the stages at all. But again, it varies. Someone
might experience 10 stages. It does, but, but the point is with unanticipated grief, like you
couldn't have, you or your friend didn't wake up that morning like he was going to die. Right.
You know, but he still died. Yep. And you have to deal with it all of a sudden. Yeah.
Um, and then there's ambiguous grief, which for my money is probably the worst kind of grief.
This is the kind of grief that comes where say, if you have a loved one who is kidnapped and you
never hear from them again, or your parents abandoned you as a child, um, or just something
happens to somebody and there's no real resolution or closure. Yeah. Or, you know, it doesn't have to
be even death. It can be like your girlfriend. You come home with to a note on your bed. Right.
And you never hear from her again or a wife, I guess. Yeah. Because I guess we should also say
like grief doesn't just have to come from death. No, of course not. Grief is basically the, um,
the, the deep and poignant distress caused by bereavement. Yeah. And bereavement is the state
of being deprived of something or someone. So yeah, that could be through death, whatever. Yeah.
Exactly. Um, but yeah. So those are the three types of normal grief just off the top of our
heads. We made those up, right? Yeah. Um, and, uh, you mentioned the, uh, the different kinds of,
the different stages of grief. And you, I mean, that's just such like a pop trope these days.
Yeah. The five stages. But it was actually new just as recently as, uh, 1969 when Dr. Elizabeth
Kubler Ross came up with the five stages of grief that you always hear about today,
that any 10 year old could probably recite to you. Yeah. But have since been kind of
deconstructed and changed and questioned and challenged, but these are the kind of the road map
to go through grief, right? Yeah. Um, denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.
Right. And denial is just basically saying this is, you're, you're not true that they're still alive.
Like what you say is a lie and I don't want to be anywhere near you because you're lying to me
right now about something very horrible. Yeah. I've never experienced that even with my friend who
fell off a building. Like that's a sudden news as you can get over the phone. And I'm just not the
kind of person who's like, no, that didn't happen. I was like, man, it immediately hit me that that
had happened. Huh. You know, yeah. And I started from there, I guess, but I didn't experience
anger either. But you know, if it might have been my brother, I might have experienced anger.
You, you raise a very good point. There's different, there's different, um, I guess
risk factors. There's different elements to grief. Yeah. And some of it is personal. Some
of it has to do with how close you are to the person. Sure. Um, some of it has to do with
the type of person you are. You're a pretty resilient person. If you were a very sensitive
bookish type, you might have taken it a little harder. You know what I mean? Yeah. Um, you have
a very, very, very strong, tight support group. You do. Yeah. So, um, I would say that that,
that probably helped quite a bit. I'm sure you had a group of friends that like helped
you through that. They were probably friends with the kid too. Yeah, absolutely. So you went
through it as a group. Yeah. Going through something alone is, is always hard. Even if you
think you're a loner and don't want to be around anyone, you're probably not doing yourself any
favorite. Right. Uh, and then lastly, you had prior experience with grief. You'd thrown yourself
down in the doghouse when you were seven. Yeah. So you had that experience to draw upon and end
to know you can make it through it. It does get better. It does go away. Yeah. So you're gonna
have the hardest normal kind of grief. If you are, like you said, a loner with no support group,
if this is the first time you've ever experienced grief, if you're the sensitive bookish type,
and, um, if you were extraordinarily close to somebody, right? Right. Yeah. Totally. In fact,
I used to do acting exercises in college. I took this acting class and, uh, believe it or not,
I took one acting class and I was not very good at it. And they, he used to tell us to try and do
like crying exercises and stuff. So what did you think of it? My brother was always the go-to.
Like imagine my brother had gotten killed or something. I would just like boom.
That's so sweet. Yeah. Yeah, your brother. I think I cried myself cry if I thought of your
brother dying. I know he's a good guy. I'm just kidding about the other family members by my way.
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All right, so, Anger? The second one? Yes, it is pretty self-explanatory. Bargaining fascinates
me. The idea that you feel like you're suddenly in a position to make a deal with God to reverse
the circumstances or bring the person back or take away the pain. It's just so crazy. You think
of somebody bargaining with God or some higher power and they're looking up, talking to the
ceiling or the sky, and that is one of the normal stages of grief. I just find that fascinating.
I did that when I was young with girls. Oh yeah. Well, I was heavy in the church,
very emotional kid, and girls like, you know, it was one of those deals like,
God, please, if you just come back to me, I promise I'll do this and I'll do that.
Yeah, but I'll clean behind my ears. Yeah, I grew out of that pretty quick. Yeah.
Because I realized it didn't make any difference. That girl's either coming back or she was hitting
the road. Exactly. And God probably had little, if anything, to do with that. That's right.
He was dealing with bigger problems. That's right. After that's depression, and this one's kind of
tricky. Yeah. If you go through the stage of depression, if you do, it's not necessarily
requisite. Right. They're starting to wonder if possibly you're already depressed. Yeah. And if
you were already depressed, that probably means you're going to maybe get stuck in this stage for
a while. Yeah. Or you might go through a depressed stage and then come out of it. Right. It's not
necessarily, but the problem with this stage is that depression is a recognized mental disorder,
and grief is not considered a mental disorder. Right. And yet, in one of these five widely
accepted stages, you go through a period where you have a mental disorder. Yeah. But it's part
of a normal process. And that's basically like taking psychologists and throwing them into the
Thunderdome. Yeah. Greasing them up with chicken fat and handing them battle axes and saying,
like, explain that. No, that's the funniest thing said in the podcast. The last one is acceptance,
of course, when you are finally able to move on. And I found that one fairly interesting article
where they charted this and they said it would look like a W. Yeah. Is that right? Like the
high points and the low points? Yeah, which I guess denials a high point. And then it goes down to
anger. Yeah. Up to bargaining. I guess, if you feel like that's getting you somewhere, maybe it's
an up. Maybe, maybe. At the very least, it's manic, I would think. Yeah. Back down to depression
and then finishing the W with a nice bit of acceptance. Yeah. And they've, as you said,
that we've sort of been studying this for like 30 or 40 years, and there was always that five
stages thing, but recently they're looking more into it. And they've done some studies with
widowers and widows, and they found that they really oscillate wildly from day to day. Right.
And it's not necessarily going to be a W. It's, I felt great today and really my spirits were up,
and I was even laughing. And then the next day they were really sad, and it just really is all
over the map. Right. But I think overall what they're finding is that on a long enough arc,
people emerge from it, and it seems to be somewhere on the order of six months to three years.
Yeah. Seems to be, and I think that's the outliers are maybe six months to three years.
That's such a ridiculous time frame. But the, but I mean, like if you study enough people,
you can probably create like a. Make up like three months to five years. Right. You know.
No, totally. And then say anyone else is an outlier. Right. But that's the thing, like you
can't. That's why everybody is very wisely. They avoid. Yeah. Saying things like that. Like this is,
this is like. It's almost a respect for the process. Like no one wants to come out and say,
no, this is how it is. Yeah. Because you can't. And that's a mean thing to do. And actually,
there's there's a grief is in danger of being medicalized in the DSM five, one of the proposals.
There's a there's always been an exemption to bereavement with depression,
like a depression diagnosis. If the person has recently gone through the process of grief or
is in the process of grief, you can't diagnose them with depression. You can, but you're not
going to get reimbursed for any meds you prescribed them. Right. Well, under the DSM five, they're
taking away this bereavement exclusion so that doctors can get reimbursed. That's good. Yeah.
But it medicalizes grief. It says no. And now it's a mental disorder. Well, when it's not supposed
to be. And it's a slippery slope. Yeah. You know, a temporary disorder, though. You would hope so.
Yeah. All right. Very keen insight. Nice work. Thank you psychology today. Yeah. Is that where
you got it? Oh, yeah. Okay. So should we talk a little about about dealing with it? I guess.
Yes. You know, these are, it's good advice, but it's also anytime I read something where they're
like, take care of yourself and eat right next to yourself. Avoid drugs and alcohol. Yeah. But
it is very much true. You know, it only is going to make things worse if you wallow in this and
abuse yourself with drugs and alcohol and don't eat and you don't think there's some all night.
There's not a therapy to pouring like half of a 40 out on the curb for someone who's gone and
then drinking the other half. Yeah. I mean, sure. But don't do that every day for like weeks and
weeks. Right. Starting at 9am. Yeah. I mean, I think me and my friends got together and got
really good and plowed after we got the news about my buddy. Yeah. But we weren't in there every
night to avoid alcohol. My advice is to avoid it after one time. Yes. But okay. So in addition to
avoiding drugs and alcohol, eating right and getting regular exercise, just the standard stuff.
What was that also in jet lag? Yeah. Every time it's anything. There are like some really good
suggestions to dealing with grief. If you find yourself overwhelmed by a profound sense of sadness.
Yeah. There are things out there that you can do to make yourself feel better. You can write a letter
to the deceased. That's said to help. Spare booking? Yeah. Why not? Throwing yourself into
say making a memorial like those roadside memorials or a video clip show. Who knows? Yeah. Actually,
you know what? When my friend died, I did a video. See? Because his family put together a website,
like a memorial website. And I had video footage back then of him and I did a little video
for the family, but it ended up really being like a great thing for me. It made you feel
better. Absolutely. Yeah. So basically putting yourself into a project where you're thinking
about this person. I imagine, and this isn't an article. This is just me doing some armchair
psychology. Sure. But I imagine it forces you to remember good things about the person.
And so during this time when you're possibly a little more emotionally fragile than usual,
you are being reminded of positive memories, positive things as well. So maybe that's why
that would help. But it definitely does help. For sure. Because when you're going through and
doing like a scrapbook, it's these great memories and these pictures and it's not,
you know, you are remembering the good stuff and like the life. Right. Which is, I think,
how everyone wants to be remembered, you know? Sure. It's like these great lives that we have.
Alive. Exactly. You know? You want to be remembered as alive. Yeah. I mean, I'm one of those people
that always wants my funeral to be, you know, a little bit more of an upbeat affair as much as
it can be, you know? Whereas some people like now, man, I want people really sad. Right. Yeah.
I want to be mourned for days. Yeah. Not me. Yeah. So you want the upbeat affair? Yeah. Okay.
I have a party and, you know, make fun of me. Okay. But not like G.G. Allen's funeral.
I have to research that one. I can only imagine what it was like. Yeah.
Pretty hardcore. Pretty much. Okay. Yeah. Did they inject his corpse with heroin or? No.
He's buried naked though and they need to live naked. It was, uh, yeah. You can do some research
if you feel like. Okay. Man, he died like in a horrible way. Didn't they find him like murdered
in an alley naked and like never found the murderer? No, I think he killed himself. I thought he was
murdered or Odead. I thought he was like stabbed to death. I don't think so. He used to threaten to
kill himself on stage. That was his big thing was that he's like one day it's going to happen. I
thought his big thing was like pooping on stage. Well, he did that a lot too. Yeah. He kept that
promise. Man. Sidebar on G.G. Allen. Who knew G.G. Allen was going to show up in the grief episode?
For real. Uh, another thing you can do to, um, I guess kind of help through the grief processes to
throw yourself into a project that you think the deceased might appreciate. Yeah. Or some
organization they might have been affiliated with. Right. That's what I meant. Yeah. Yeah. Like if you
lose someone to cancer, maybe get involved with the Cullman Foundation or one of the other groups.
Or apparently mad mothers against drunk driving was founded in memory of a deceased person.
Absolutely. Killed by a drunk driver one way to imagine. Right. Um, there's just a lot of
stuff out there that you can do yourself. A lot of people pretty much immediately go to therapy
at least initially. Yeah. To get a little help, to get some insights and advice, whatever.
Um, that's not necessarily the case for everybody. And they definitely found that therapy is not
even necessarily helpful for everybody. Right. There's a lot of people out there who probably
wonder if they're dead inside because they don't grieve like supposedly everyone else does. But
study after study is finding that actually people who go through significant grief, um,
is a fairly small portion of people who experience a loss. Yeah. Didn't we have a study in here?
Oh yeah, right here. Yeah. Um, they, what they do generally is they track groups of
widows and widowers for a period of time and just have them, you know, remark about how
they're feeling on a day to day basis. And, uh, this one was for up to five years, I think. And
between 26 and 65% had no significant symptoms in the initial years after the loss. Yeah. And
only nine to 41% did. And there's a big variability there, but they said it's partially from how the
symptoms were measured. So. And in another study, they found that about 21% experience what you
could diagnose as depression, uh, after the loss and only about 11% um, had trouble with it.
Like couldn't shake it after six to 18 months, I believe. Right. And 10% of people who lost a spouse
felt relief. Uh, these were people that had reported being unhappy in their marriage. Right.
So there's that. Those are the ones that dance on their spouse's grave. I guess so. And I don't
necessarily think it's a that cold, but there, there could be some mild relief if you weren't
genuinely weren't happy in your marriage. Right. And it doesn't mean you're dancing on graves and
partying, but it might just be like, all right, well, now I can go move to Cabo San Lucas like
I'd always wanted to hang out with Sammy Hagar, but my wife hates the ocean. Yeah. And now I can
do that. Right. And my wife also hated Sammy Hagar, but I'm going to go hang out with them.
Yeah. They also think that men may grieve heavier even though it's a long believe that women do.
Um, but I think a study like that is sort of silly. It's so variable, like from person to
person. I don't know. Right. But we say all this to point out that if you don't experience what
other people would recognize as grief, there's something wrong with you any more than there is
if you experience grief. Exactly. What psychiatry and psychology have started to pay a little more
attention to is what's been termed complicated grief. Yeah. And that is technically,
if you go say several months to where your life is really, really interrupted, you can't sleep,
you can't eat, you're having trouble focusing on anything but the death of this person, the loss
of them. Yeah. You start to seriously doubt things very important in your life, maybe like religion
even, right? Have lost a child, like there can't be a guide, that kind of stuff. Right. Or conversely,
if you can't even mention the person's name or hear the person's name, basically if your life
is disrupted for many months, then basically everybody from the Mayo Clinic to the APA says
maybe you should go see somebody about this. Yeah. Because it can also manifest itself in aggression
and violence, self-destructive, physical self-destruction. Yeah. So it can
complicate it as an understatement here for this kind of grief, I think. Right. So there's different
kinds. If you go see a counselor with what's considered normal grief, they're probably going to
help you let go of the person while still honoring their memory and recognizing them and the impact
that they had on your life, but to get out there and live your own life. They're going to try to
reach the same goal if you have complicated grief, but they're going to do it a different way and
they're probably going to encourage you to really form an even greater bond. Yeah. With the person
now that they're deceased, that you can nurture and hold on to and carry around with you. That
makes sense to me. Yeah. In this case, it's not like you can't tell a parent who has lost a child
and you need to work through this and get over it. Right. And that's actually one of the risk factors
for complicated grief is the death of a child, the death of somebody that you are possibly
codependent on and very, very close to, or the death of a sudden death, usually from trauma,
say like a murder or something like that. Right. Those are risk factors for complicated grief.
So I would imagine that if you had a loved one who was murdered, you probably are already getting
some sort of professional attention. And if you're not, maybe you should. Well, yeah. And that,
what we're basically talking about was the difference between grief and trauma. And when
you've experienced it to that degree, trauma is a whole different deal. They'd say it feels unreal
and it can be terrifying. Terror is the most common emotion. It's common if you have dreams about
a deceased loved one. But if you're having traumatizing dreams about yourself being in danger,
then you've crossed the line from grief into trauma and complicated grief. Yeah. Heavy stuff.
It is very heavy. Losing a pet is, for some people, a very, very, very big deal. And other people,
well, people that aren't into pets at all don't get it. And then some people that do have pets are
just more equipped to deal with the loss of a pet and not like it's a loss of a human. Yeah.
But for people like me and Jerry over there, I know that losing a pet, you know, is like
equivalent to losing, you know, a family member. And the grieving process is about the same,
I would imagine, if it's, you know, that impactful. And my advice is you should talk to
other people who have similar feelings because one of the things that can be toughest about losing
a pet is when you talk to people who don't have pets and don't think it's that big of a deal to
lose a pet. And that can make things a lot worse. Well, they say that if you, if you do experience
the loss of a pet and you find that you're grieving over it, you should go ahead with the grief.
Yeah. Don't feel embarrassed or dumb for that. Of course not. Go lie down in the doghouse and
cry like a six year old. You got anything else? I ran across one thing. There was a guy in 1983
named Paul Rosenblatt who carried out a study of I think like 56 Victorian diaries
of people who had experienced loss. Oh, interesting. And so grief is definitely
cultural and also historically bound too. Like they found, he found that the goal for these
diarists was to keep the person alive around them, right? Like all the time, like they would try to
sense the person around them or like maybe sit in their favorite chair because they could tell
that they were still there in somewhere or whatever. And that under those circumstances,
they found that grief never really seemed to ever go away, that it was something that they
carried around for the rest of their lives. And in fact, one of the things that the Victorians did
was they would wear black for a year, I believe. Yeah. And then dark colors after that, especially
if you were a widow. And on the anniversary you wear black too, right? I think so. Yeah. And you
were expected to carry around this grief for the rest of your life. And one of the things they
also did that actually is still around today was bereavement photography, which is postmortem
photography. Yeah, we've done a thing on that. Have we? Yeah. And we did, didn't we? Yeah. And we
got an email just as recently as today from a woman who lost a child and had a cast made of
the baby's hands and feet. Really? And she said that it was something that has very much helped
her through. I didn't down yet. Yeah, she said it was a gift from the hospital. Wow. To help them
through their grief. And the hospital said, you know, you might not want it now, but we really
encourage you to have this one. And we'll pay for it. Because, you know, years from now you may
really be happy that you have it. She said they're absolutely right. Wow, that's really great. Yeah.
What was that email and reference to? Death masks? Okay. Yeah. But it just happened to come in
today when we were researching grief. Wow. Yeah. That's about it, I guess, huh? Yeah. That's it.
That's A to Z grief. We touched on every single thing possible. What a downer. Yeah. I guess if
you want to learn more about grief, you can type that word into the search bar, howstuffworks.com.
Remember, I before E except after C. Chuck, hold on. Let's take a message break, huh?
The war on drugs is the excuse our government uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff.
Stuff that'll piss you off. The property is guilty. Exactly. And it starts as guilty. It starts as
guilty. The cops, are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging? They just have way
better names for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being robbed. They call civil
asset work. Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast. On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine
Taylor, stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses and
choker necklaces. We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack
and dive back into the decade of the 90s. We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it. It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends, and non-stop
references to the best decade ever. Do you remember going to blockbuster? Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips? Was that a cereal? No, it was hair. Do you remember AOL
instant messenger and the dial-up sound like poltergeist? So leave a code on your best friend's
beeper because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts flowing. Each episode will rival
the feeling of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy, blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s. Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. It is time for Listener Mail.
So, Josh, you can, by the way, to jump back, look into more grief on our website, or you could go
to Google and look at Pygmy Goats. That helps, too. That's what I would say. All right, so now,
not Listener Mail, Josh, today we have Administrative Details.
Nice, Chuck. Well done. All right, so we're gonna, this is gonna be an ongoing thing because,
as usual, they stack up. Well, man, we have very busy work schedules. And we like to say thanks to
as many people as possible. For those of you who don't know, Administrative Details is a segment
that replaces Listener Mail in which we read out thank yous to fans who have sent us stuff tokens.
Yeah, anything. Yep. For example, a postcard of Rapa Nui from Ryan Confer. Thank you for that.
Nice. That's Easter Island. Jacob Ward sent us Yellowstone Park shirts, postcards, info cards,
hats. Oh, yeah. Because he works there. Yeah. That was a pretty sweet gift. And he gets a discount.
Thanks to Shanti Diva for the postcard of the Monkey Knotts. Casey Herring sent us cookies.
And they were delicious. Yeah. Which cookies? The delicious one. Okay. Not just crappy ones.
We got a wedding invitation from Rachel and John Reed. Oh, yeah. Congratulations. I'm surprised
no one's asked us to officiate. I do that. Oh, man, you just opened the floodgates. Hitch safe.
Inventor Tim Freeman sent us a hitch safe. And that is a little thing that you stick in your
trailer hitch if you have a truck pickup truck. And it's got a little key in this hollowed out.
And you can like put your wallet and stuff in there if you go kayaking and lock it up.
I didn't see this. Well, because you're under pickup. Okay. Do you get a trailer hitch buddy?
You can we'll split the hitch. Okay, we'll have a year. Yeah. Let's see. We got a Christmas card
and postcards plural from Becca Evans at UCSC. All right. Justin Norman sent us an Ergo desk
and iPad holder. And I'm actually using the one for the laptop on my desk. It's quite lovely.
And it's handmade wood. And you can find that at woodfold.com. Yeah, that's really a sight to behold.
Yeah, it's amazing. It looks like plastic. Right? But it's wood. Yeah. Yeah. We got a Christmas
postcard from Davini B, who for some reason was dressed as Wilfred from the TV show Wilfred.
So thank you, Davini. Laurie and Leonard sent us some yummy chocolates from
Thigus in Marshfield, Wisconsin. Yeah, it was lovely. We got a copy of the book,
brushing the teeth of Elvis's monkey and a nice letter from Nurse Beth. So thank you for that.
You know what? I'm going to go ahead and bust through my books here. We got how colon,
why how we do anything means everything by Dov Seedman. We got swing colon, the search
my father, Louis Prima by Alan Gerstle, Science Nearly Explained by Dick Maxwell. Yeah. And that
is Alan Amazon Kindle, the vampire combat manual from our buddy, Roger Ma, who sent us the zombie
combat manual. Yeah. And I imagine pretty soon we're going to have a werewolf combat manual.
I would hope so. Unless Roger's getting lazy. And Trunculus, which is a children's book from
Sean Antoniak and Matthew Antoniak. That was sweet. It was like a graphic novel. Yeah. And they
sent us some cool stickers from 811graphics.com. Yeah. So those are my books. Nice. Let's see.
What else? We got another postcard from Rapa Nui from Emily B. That rhymes. Wow. Yeah. We got
tri-fold wallets from tri-fold tri-hold from tri-fold wallets. Nice man. Yeah. You should get
paid for this. There's a dude named Lars C. who kind of went all over the place. And he went to
Los Cobos, Los Cabos, of course, Sammy Hergar's place, Seattle, Philadelphia, Calgary, Montreal,
Nova Scotia. And he kind of took us with him and sent us postcards along the way. So thanks a lot,
Lars. Aaron Cooper, thank you for your cool foam core poster versions of some of your best
stuff. You should know Photoshop jobs. Yes. I love these. That's not the first time
they sent those either. So thanks a lot, Aaron. It's a regular copy. We got a nice
postogram from Michael Storer. Carolyn Larson sent us magnetic skulls. Yeah. Those are awesome.
They are very cool. Like a day of the dead skulls of her own art, I believe. I think so.
I've got her down, too. And I have her website. It is, I believe carolinlarsonart.com. If I come
across it, I'll correct myself if that's wrong. But I'm pretty sure that's right. Okay. I got one
more for now. Okay. And then you pick one more good one. And then we'll pick this up again.
Jennifer Dunaway sent us a knitted tree scarf. And this is just a scarf that you go and you pick
a tree and you put a little scarf on it. And it's pretty darn cute and makes the city more
beautiful. Nice. So thank you Jennifer Dunaway for that. And then I got a nice handmade birthday
card for me specifically. Nice. From SYSK Army member Courtney Hoover. So thanks a lot for that
Courtney. And that's administrative details for this week. Part one. As far as this list goes,
we've got this for the next six months. And I am right. It is carolinlarsonart, C-A-R-O-L-I-N-E-L-A-R-S-E-N
art dot com. Yeah. Get a tree scarf. Yeah. That's what I say. And a skull magnet. All right. Oh, okay.
Let's see. If you want to tweet to us, you can join us on Twitter at SYSK podcast. You can join
us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know. You can send us an email to stuffpodcastsatdiscovery.com
and you can send us a good old fashioned website visit to stuffyoushouldknow.com For more on this
and thousands of other topics visit howstuffworks.com. The war on drugs is the excuse our government
uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff. Stuff that'll piss you off. The cops. Are they just
like looting? Are they just like pillaging? They just have way better names for what they call like
what we would call a jack move or being robbed. They call civil acid.
Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you get your
podcast. Hi, everybody. I'm Tyler Florence. I'm Wells Adams. We're the hosts of the new podcast
Two Dudes in a Kitchen. You might be asking yourself, why do these guys have a podcast?
Because we love food. We got a chance to click together on television, on Food Network back
in the day, connecting with fantastic techniques and having a great time while you're doing it.
This is a podcast for you for you to call into, give us your feedback and we're here to answer
your questions. Kind of get those kitchen burners fired up. Listen to Two Dudes in a Kitchen on the
iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.