How to talk to your kids and teens about the Tumbler Ridge mass shootings; Carney to attend vigil
As news and social media coverage of Tuesday’s mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., continues to blanket the country, parents should be proactive about talking with their kids about the tragedy, psychologists say.
The fact that it happened at a school hits especially close to home, said Dr. Jo Ann Unger, a clinical psychologist in Winnipeg.
“Whenever we can see ourselves or can relate to something very difficult or tragic that’s happened, it naturally creates a larger response,” she said.
“Children seeing that other children have been killed, have died, that can certainly cause us feelings of empathy and sadness and grief,” Unger said.

