All content for Unparented: A Dead Parents Club Podcast is the property of Robert DelFave and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This week, I'm sitting down with Sylvia Wolfer, a grief-informed practitioner who has experienced loss on a level that's hard to wrap your head around. She lost her father at seven. Her younger brother at 17. Her older brother at 40. And then her mother a few years later. From a family of six, only Sylvia and one brother remain.
What makes this conversation different is how Sylvia has turned all of that loss into something she can actually use. Not just for herself, but for others. After years of being ambushed by grief triggers, she got angry. Not at the loss itself, but at how much grief had taken from her. She felt like she had missed out on time with her older brother because she was still so buried in grief from her younger brother's death. When he died too, something shifted. She decided she was done letting grief run the show.
We talk about the neuroscience of grief, what's actually happening in the brain when we lose someone, and why understanding that can be strangely comforting. Sylvia explains the three-dimensional map the brain uses for relationships and why we still reach for the phone to call someone who's gone. She also shares practical tools for managing grief triggers, tending to the body when the heart and mind are overwhelmed, and why she schedules time to grieve on her own terms.
This one gets into the science, but it never loses the human side. Sylvia is warm, honest, and somehow still full of love for life after everything she's been through. If you've ever felt like grief has taken too much from you, this conversation might help you start taking some of it back.
We get into:
what it was like losing her father suddenly at seven years old
the gift her dad's death gave her, seeing the good in people
why sudden loss is especially hard on the brain
the three-dimensional map and why we still want to call people who are gone
how she realized her nervous system was completely dysregulated
the window of tolerance and how grief shrinks it
why she schedules time to grieve instead of letting it ambush her
tending to the body when the head and heart are too overwhelmed
how she continues relationships with people who are no longer here
her digital courses, guided meditations, and writing on grief
Sylvia's story is proof that grief doesn't have to take everything. Sometimes, it can be the thing that finally makes you fight back.
🌐 Learn more about Sylvia's work: https://sylviawolfer.com 📸 Follow Sylvia on Instagram🎧 Sylvia's Voice on Spotify🎧 Sylvia's Voice on Apple Podcasts📩 Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.me 📸 Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast