Dayton Daily News

COVID Grief Network focuses on young adults

Cincinnati student is co-founder of support group for people in their 20s and 30s.

- By Meredith Moss Staff Writer

Chloe Zelkha understand­s what it’s like to lose a parent. Four years ago, when she had just turned 26, her father died suddenly from an aortic aneurysm.

As a result of that life-changing experience, the Cincinnati woman feels she’s able to relate to others her age who’ve experience­d sudden loss. In these challengin­g times, Zelkha has found her calling as the co-founder of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults. The mission of the organizati­on is to connect young people who are grieving with others in their 20s and 30s who know and understand. “This is a huge crisis and there are a lot of folks who need care right now,” says the first-year student at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, where she is studying to become a rabbi. “Being in community together is a powerful connection.”

How it works

The all-volunteer network got its start about a year ago at the beginning of the pandemic. Participan­ts learn about it through Facebook, Instagram, Google searches, word-of-mouth and media.

The nonprofit organizati­on offers free support in a variety of ways. Participan­ts can attend six grief support sessions with a caring volunteer who may be a chaplain, a therapist, a social worker or a student in a related field. Zelkha says it’s important to understand that the sessions are designed for support, not profession­al counseling or therapy.

After those initial sessions, an individual may join a group of 8 to 12 people who meet weekly for eight weeks. Many develop friendship­s beyond the official timeline.

“My deepest hope is that we undo some of the isolation that folks grieving during COVID are experienci­ng,” says Zelkha. “We hope they feel connected to a community that has their back and that they have the space to honor and process their loss.”

What’s so different about the deaths and illnesses during this past year, she says, is that it can be difficult for mourners to find closure when they didn’t get to say goodbye to their loved one in person and didn’t get to mark the loss in a way that they would in normal times — with a large funeral, a wake, or the sevenday period in Judaism known as sitting shiva.

“So in some ways people are grieving a double loss,” she says. “They are grieving the person they loved and the way they would have grieved if not for COVID.”

Zelkha says many of the young people are experienci­ng rage. “We see a lot of anger because the losses so often feel preventabl­e,” she explains. “People may feel if the government and society had chosen a different path, their loved one might still be alive.”

Before finding the support group Ariel Tusa had been feeling isolated. “Though I have my older brothers and my husband to lean on, it felt lonely not knowing anyone else who has lost someone to the virus,” says the Louisiana woman. “There are so many aspects of my dad’s illness, hospitaliz­ation, death and funeral arrangemen­ts that I hadn’t been able to process out loud until the group. I can’t express how powerful connecting with other COVID mourners has been. I’m still struggling with grief and waves of emotion every hour of every day, but the group has helped me feel more comfortabl­e talking about my grief and most of all connect with people who get it.”

More about Zelkha

Zelkha grew up in the San Francisco Bay area. Immediatel­y after her father’s death, she says she drove her dad’s car, went to his favorite coffee shops and shared stories about him with others. “Those weeks of being surrounded by our community and feeling empowered in my grieving process were really healing,” she says.

About a year later, when the initial loss wasn’t so fresh, she realized she wasn’t quite ready to go back to her previous life. “I needed to lean into being with death and dying and spend more time with other people who were going through those moments,” she says. She had previously been working in the Jewish spiritual world and decided to do a residency as a hospital chaplain.

“While I was there sitting with folks who were dying and with their grieving families, I noticed

a gap in grief care for young adults in their 20s and 30s like me who had lost someone important,” she says. “There were places for young children and older adults, but not age-specific offerings for those in my age group.”

In 2018, she began getting together with a few friends who had also lost someone and also happened to be grief workers — therapists, community organizers, chaplains. “We started putting on sleep-over weekend retreats for those who had lost a sibling, a dear friend, a parent. We found sometimes people need peer connection and community more than they need clinical care.”

The special weekends included an opening circle of sharing, workshops, talking about a meaningful object that related to their loss. “Picture

a bunch of people sitting around a bonfire with 40 other young people who know what it’s like,” Zelkha explains.

Starting the COVID grief group

When COVID started, the group realized they were no longer going to be able to host the in-person retreats, and also that a lot of people their age were about to join their ranks. They realized they could mobilize people to offer grief support related to the pandemic.

“We had seen how powerful it was to connect with people who have experience­d something similar to you on many levels and we knew that a lot of young adults would be losing someone to COVID or have someone seriously ill with COVID,” Zelkha says.

Neely Grobani, who lives in New York, says the support group made a huge impact in a short amount of time. “It’s given me space to feel seen, heard, supported, validated and less alone. It is one of the only spaces in my life right now where I feel I can be wholly myself, with my anger and fear and sadness, without judgment or expectatio­n.”

The COVID Grief Network now has 100 active volunteers and has matched more than 300 young adults with someone offering support. Both participan­ts and volunteers come from all over the country and meet on Zoom.

Zelkha is part of the leadership team that oversees the project.

At the same time, she continues her rabbinical studies. “I think I want to be a rabbi because I want to offer people transforma­tive experience­s and I think the spiritual community and Jewish community can be a powerful home for those kinds of experience­s.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Chloe Zelkha is co-founder of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults.
CONTRIBUTE­D Chloe Zelkha is co-founder of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults.
 ??  ?? Chloe Zelkha, cofounder of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults, is pictured with her father who died suddenly when she was 26.
Chloe Zelkha, cofounder of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults, is pictured with her father who died suddenly when she was 26.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Organizers of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults are pictured at a meeting of their leadership team.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Organizers of the COVID Grief Network for Young Adults are pictured at a meeting of their leadership team.

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