Grieving in the age of social media

FB_20121213134334_JPG

Copyright Getty Images

Advertisement

Posted: 12/19/2012

CINCINNATI - All the praying wouldn't keep Larry Anderson alive, no matter how hard or how often his mother, Mizzan Anderson, prayed.  Larry Anderson was shot dead in Evanston, Ohio, on Dec. 7, 2009.

Anderson immediately took her grief online. She started a Facebook page and posted funeral information. Friends tweeted.  She even turned to Facebook when she was looking for her son's killer.

And it worked. All of it.

She grieved with friends, even strangers online. And tips lead to the arrest of her son's killer, Walter Johnson.

"That's what I was looking for, answers," Anderson said.  "Why?  Why?  Why?  So I was posting stuff all the time"

Anderson is part of a trend. Go online now and you will find page after page on social networks dedicated to those who were murdered in Connecticut. Some pages are started by strangers who want to help and say what's on their mind.

" I think about these mothers who are just now on that journey burying their kids," Anderson said. "The funeral service it's all big, everything is happening now, but when the cameras are gone and all the lights and all the actions, that's when your pain really starts."

Funeral homes are now starting to understand the power of social media.  Some offer "cyber packages" where they will create a Facebook and Twitter page for you and host a virtual funeral for those who can not attend.

Copyright 2012 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

  • Comments
  • More CT shooting coverage
Conn. governor signs sweeping gun limits into law
Conn. gov signs sweeping gun limits law

Alongside family members of some of the victims of the shooting…

Parents of Newtown victim met with killer's father
Newtown parents meet with killer's dad

The parents of one of the 20 first-graders killed in the Sandy …

Newtown gunman had interest in other mass murders
Newtown gunman wanted to out-do others

The man who killed 26 people inside a Connecticut elementary …

Newtown residents to join gun control march in DC
Newtown residents join gun control…

Residents from Newtown, Conn., are joining a march on …

Arcade video shooting games pulled after massacres
Arcade games pulled after massacres

Video arcades across the country are debating whether or not …

Ohio school board votes to arm science teacher after Newtown, Conn., school shooting
Ohio school votes to arm science…

When it came to a vote for a school board resolution at last …

Newtown schools chief urges continued police guard after students scared to go out for recess
Newtown students scared to go outside

Newtown's schools superintendent is urging an indefinite police…

Springboro school board member to propose arming staff
Springboro schools debate arming staff

Springboro school board member Jim Rigano will lead a …

Deputies attendance rises at Maysville school after Sandy Hook tragedy
Deputies stand guard at Maysville…

Deputies patrol the Mason County Schools campus to help ease …

School offers fresh start for Sandy Hook Elementary School students
School is a fresh start for CT students

Sarah Caron made her son his favorite pancakes for breakfast …

Advertisement
 

Top Stories


  1. The IRS and its tea party tempest

    The IRS and its tea party tempest

    The Internal Revenue Service is feeling the sort of heat that targeted taxpayers feel from the tax agency. It's the sense that a powerful someone is breathing down your neck.

    • SKorea says NKorea fires 3 missiles

      • SBUX leads to hatchet hitchhiker arrest

        • Car goes down embankment, into creek

          • Phils snap Reds' 6-game winning streak

            • Stay Connected