Current:Home > ScamsAnderson Cooper says he 'never really grieved' before emotional podcast, announces Season 2 -FinTechWorld
Anderson Cooper says he 'never really grieved' before emotional podcast, announces Season 2
View
Date:2025-04-12 13:25:50
Anderson Cooper is opening up about his delay in experiencing grief after the death of his mom, dad and brother.
In an essay for CNN published Wednesday, marking the Season 2 premiere of his grieving podcast "All There Is," Cooper wrote, "I realized a couple months ago that I’ve never really grieved before. … But experiencing loss and actually grieving are two different things."
Cooper's first season of his podcast discussed his journey going through his late loved ones' things. "When the first season of the podcast ended last November, I stopped going through all those boxes. It was just too hard, and I needed a break," he shared.
The reporter capped the Season 1 finale by going through 200 voicemails of listeners sharing their own stories of coping with loss. "There were more than a thousand calls I hadn’t heard, and I felt bad about that. I didn’t plan on doing a second season of the podcast, but a few months ago, I listened to all those unheard messages – more than 46 hours of them. It turned out to be one of the most moving experiences of my life," Cooper shared.
All There Is with Anderson Cooper: Facing Our Grief on Apple Podcasts
Cooper revealed that hearing those voicemails encouraged him to go through his parents and brother's boxed items once more. In doing that, he recovered an essay his dad wrote more than 40 years ago titled "The Importance of Grieving."
"He wrote about what happens to children when they aren’t able to properly grieve. He quoted a psychologist who said, 'When a person is unable to complete a mourning task in childhood, he either has to surrender his emotions in order that they do not suddenly overwhelm him, or else he may be haunted constantly throughout his life, with a sadness for which he can never find an appropriate explanation,'" the news anchor recalled, adding that that was his wake up call in realizing that he didn't properly grieve.
"When my dad died in 1978, I dug a deep hole inside myself and pushed my fear and sadness and anger down into it. I barely even cried. A decade later, when my brother Carter died by suicide, I pushed those feelings down further," Cooper shared. "I thought I could keep all that grief buried forever, but it turns out grief doesn’t work that way. As one podcast listener said to me, 'It has to go somewhere.'"
'We all get stuck':Anderson Cooper more vulnerable than ever in new grief podcast
He added, "I see now that in burying my grief, I’ve also buried my ability to feel joy, and I don’t want to do that any longer. I can’t. I want to feel all there is."
Season 2 of Cooper's podcast will focus on people who "have found ways to live with their grief and to learn from it," he concluded.
If you'd like to share your thoughts on grief with USA TODAY for possible use in a future story, please take this survey here.
People are talking to dead loved ones– and they can't stop laughing. It's a refreshing trend.
veryGood! (661)
Related
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- EPA approves year-round sales of higher ethanol blend in 8 Midwest states
- RHOP's Mia Thornton Threatens Karen Huger With a New Cheating Rumor in Tense Preview
- The Leap from Quantitative Trading to Artificial Intelligence
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Watch melted during atomic blast over Hiroshima sells for more than $31,000
- Fire traps residents in two high-rise buildings in Valencia, Spain, killing at least 4, officials say
- The Excerpt podcast: Can Jon Stewart make The Daily Show must-see TV for a new generation?
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Missing Texas girl Audrii Cunningham found dead: What to know about missing children cases
Ranking
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- 8-year-old chess prodigy makes history as youngest ever to defeat grandmaster
- Cezanne seascape mural discovered at artist's childhood home
- 2 climbers are dead and another is missing on Pico de Orizaba, Mexico's highest mountain
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- A former funeral home owner has been arrested after a corpse lay in a hearse for 2 years
- 2 children were killed when a hillside collapsed along a Northern California river
- Ex-FBI source accused of lying about Bidens and having Russian contacts is returned to US custody
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Houthi missile hits ship in Gulf of Aden as Yemeni rebels continue attacks over Israel-Hamas war
AP Week in Pictures: North America
Iowa vs. Indiana: Caitlin Clark struggles as Hawkeyes upset by Hoosiers
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
US promises new sanctions on Iran for its support of Russia’s war in Ukraine, potential missile sale
Why MLB's new uniforms are getting mixed reviews
Mississippi might allow incarcerated people to sue prisons over transgender inmates