Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sheryl Sandberg, ‘Lean In’ author and Facebook executive, shares lessons on grief

- ANDREA JANUTA

When her husband died suddenly two years ago, Sheryl Sandberg was transforme­d by her grief.

“I am a different person. I am sadder,” said Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer and co-author of “Option B: Facing Adversity, Building Resilience, and Finding Joy” (Knopf).

“But I am also more grateful, more alive, more joyful, more appreciati­ve than I ever thought I would be.”

Sandberg’s husband, SurveyMonk­ey CEO Dave Goldberg, died on the treadmill of a heart arrhythmia at age 47 while the two were vacationin­g in Mexico in May 2015. Sandberg unexpected­ly became a widow and single mother of their two children, then ages 7 and 10.

“He was a person I always turned to who told me it would be OK,” said Sandberg, 47. “And then one day out of absolutely nowhere, he wasn’t there. And that’s where this journey starts.”

The book’s title refers to a quote from a friend who comforted Sandberg when she was longing for her husband. “Option A is not available,” he said, and encouraged her to make the most of Option B.

Sandberg offered anecdotes and advice from the past two years, moving the audience to laughter and tears.

After describing how she collapsed while sobbing on a dance floor after a moment of happiness, she reminded a Florida audience to allow themselves to feel happy after moments of sadness. “Push away the guilt and look for the joy,” she said.

Sandberg’s book weaves together her personal experience with research from her close friend and co-author, Wharton organizati­onal psychologi­st Adam Grant. The book’s overall thrust: to build resilience before and after trauma.

Resiliency is a muscle that can be trained, Sandberg said, and she offered techniques she learned from her own grief. She suggested writing letters to yourself as if writing to a friend in order to remove self-blame.

“We say things to ourselves all day that we’d never say to our worst enemy,” Sandberg said.

She also cautioned against permanence — believing the feeling would never end — and pervasiven­ess — failing to see how things could be worse.

Sandberg’s first bestsellin­g book, “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,” included a chapter titled, “Make your partner a real partner.”

During the talk, Sandberg discussed how her views on that chapter have evolved. At the time, single mothers criticized her for being out of touch with their lives. Sandberg said she did not fully understand the difficulti­es of raising a family without a partner. “We do not do enough to help single moms,” she says now.

One of Sandberg’s goals in writing “Option B” was to “take the elephants out of the room,” and make grieving less isolating. She encouraged people to talk with those who were going through hardship rather than stay silent for fear of saying the wrong thing.

“Your silence is not protecting them, it’s protecting you,” she said.

Sandberg also shared stories of loss and growth from other women who had dealt with abuse, death of family members and other hardships, in part to demonstrat­e how adversity is something that everyone experience­s to some degree.

One of the prompts for “Option B” was an outpouring of support Sandberg received after her Facebook post 30 days after her husband’s death went viral. She recounted how a friend who had been driving past her house daily finally came to her door in response to her post.

“I’m hoping that Option B helps us show up for each other,” Sandberg said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In “Option B,” Sheryl Sandberg writes about her grief and personal transforma­tion in the months following the unexpected death of her husband.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In “Option B,” Sheryl Sandberg writes about her grief and personal transforma­tion in the months following the unexpected death of her husband.
 ??  ?? Option B. By Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant. Knopf. 240 pages. $25.95.
Option B. By Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant. Knopf. 240 pages. $25.95.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States