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What ‘Lion King’ teaches us about grief in children

- ELENA MERENDA

THE Lion King is a movie about a young lion cub named Simba, who idolises his father, King Mufasa, and is eager for his own royal destiny.

Scar, the former heir to the throne before Simba’s birth, sends Mufasa to his death and convinces Simba that the king’s death is the young cub’s own fault.

Since the film’s release in 1994, it has taught children lessons about the circle of life, the importance of following your dreams and the possibilit­y of learning from mistakes.

Most importantl­y, it teaches about children’s grief, specifical­ly their emotional responses to the death of a parent.

Heart of the child’s existence

When Mufasa brings Simba to the highest point of Pride Rock to show him the kingdom’s boundaries and to help Simba understand the responsibi­lity he will one day inherit, Simba places his paw in his father’s footprint.

The scene suggests Simba will one day have large shoes to fill. It portrays the respect and admiration the young lion has for his father.

The impact of the parent’s death on the family, and the loss of a significan­t role model for the child, changes the child’s existence.

Children progress through what Swiss-born psychiatri­st Elisabeth KüblerRoss identified as the five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.

Immediatel­y after his father’s death, Simba displays a range of typical grieving emotions, from self-blame and anger to profound sadness.

Denial

Denial is an important part of the grieving process as it helps individual­s to cope, survive the loss and progress through feelings of grief.

Individual­s go numb and wonder how they can continue. Simba’s character shows how death can be a difficult reality for children to accept.

When Simba finds his father’s body, the cub is in shock. He circles Mufasa.

“Dad?” he asks. “Dad, come on, you have to get up.”

Simba also experience­s guilt: if only the young cub had listened to his father’s request not to explore on his own. If only his father hadn’t been trying to rescue him from a stampede.

Feelings of guilt associated with a parent’s death are not unique to Simba.

Between the ages of 3 and 6, children enter what psychologi­st Erik Erikson called the “initiative versus guilt” psychosoci­al stage.

The line between reality and fantasy is blurred.

Children believe they can make things happen with their thoughts and wishes.

If a parent dies during this time period, children might feel responsibl­e.

Anger

When Simba escapes Pride Rock with his hakuna matata (no worries) mantra, he pushes away his thoughts and feelings about his father’s death.

It’s not until Simba meets up again with an old friend, Nala, that the growing lion has to face his self-blame and anger about his father’s death.

Without the cognitive ability to understand death’s finality, children often think of people who have died as being far away or on a trip.

They may feel angry when their loved one doesn’t return. It is not until children are between ages 5 and 7 that they develop an understand­ing of the irreversib­ility and inevitabil­ity of death, allowing them to acknowledg­e the deceased parent has not abandoned them.

Bargaining and depression

Eventually, individual­s who are grieving find themselves bargaining. A child, for example, may promise to pick up their toys or stop arguing with their siblings to get back what was lost.

Depression is an appropriat­e response to loss. Depression in childhood can present as sadness, frequent crying, changes in appetite or sleep patterns or unexplaine­d aches and pains.

Simba’s bargaining and depression appear in the same scene. Once Simba stops shouting blame at his father for leaving, Simba says: “It’s me. It’s my fault.”

Rafiki, a character who can be interprete­d as a spiritual healer, reminds Simba that although Mufasa is dead, his spirit lives inside Simba.

When Simba looks into the lake at his own reflection, he sees his father and is reminded of past hopes and dreams.

Simba now enters the bargaining stage, pleading with Mufasa to stay.

Acceptance

Timon and Pumbaa famously teach Simba that “… bad things happen and you can’t do anything about it… you can either run from it or learn from it”.

Grief is a multi-tasking emotion that people don’t move on from. Children have to learn to move forward with grief.

Even with grief’s weight, it’s possible to follow dreams.

It isn’t until a bereaved adult recognises that they have to continue through life with grief that they are able to transition into the final stage, acceptance.

At the movie’s end, Simba accepts his father’s death and his own rightful place as king. | The Conversati­on

Merenda is the assistant programme head of early childhood studies at the University of Guelph-Humber, Canada

 ?? Disney/AP ?? KING Mufasa, and his son, Simba, in a scene from The Lion King. The writer says the movie highlights children’s emotional responses to the death of a parent. |
Disney/AP KING Mufasa, and his son, Simba, in a scene from The Lion King. The writer says the movie highlights children’s emotional responses to the death of a parent. |

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