By KERRIE NOONAN
Don’t you remember we told you? Mr Hooper died, he’s dead.
Oh, yes, I remember. I’ll give it to him when he comes back.
Big Bird, Mr Hooper’s not coming back.
Why not?
Big Bird, when people die they don’t come back…
Ever?
No, never.
Why not?
Well, Big Bird, they’re dead, they can’t come back.
***
When I was a child, I loved watching Sesame Street. I still find it delightful and love watching the old clips of Ernie in his bathtub, those weird telephone-discovering Martians that say yip, yip, yip…
But none come close to Big Bird. I watched in the days that Mr Snuffleupagus was still his imaginary friend and I loved the way that Snuffie could disappear from those pesky adults despite his size.
In 1982 Mr Hooper, who ran ‘Hooper’s Store’ died in real life and the producers of Sesame Street decided to acknowledge his death this very touching scene. This scene, apparently captured in one take, provides a lesson in how to talk to our children about death.
Now, I’m a clinical psychologist, but Big Bird taught me a lot. Here are 5 lessons for talking to kids about death.