In this deeply intimate conversation, we sit down with Annalise Nelson as she shares her story of motherhood, identity, loss, and rebuilding life after the death of her 7-year-old daughter, Ann-Marie. Now parenting a newborn son, Leo, Annalise reflects on how grief has reshaped everything she thought she knew about love, time, and meaning—while also revealing unexpected moments of beauty, connection, and grace.
Annalise begins by sharing her early life in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, growing up as the youngest of four children in a home led by a strong single mother after the loss of her father. She reflects on how her mother modeled resilience, independence, and the importance of community—values that deeply shaped her path into teaching and later motherhood.
She speaks candidly about the sudden medical crisis that led to Ann-Marie’s passing, and the devastating yet clarifying experience of receiving answers in the hospital. In the midst of unimaginable grief, she describes holding multiple truths at once: heartbreak, gratitude for medical staff, and a strange sense of grounding in understanding what had happened.
A central thread of the conversation is how community carried her:
- Friends, neighbors, and even strangers showed up in profound ways
- An 8.5-hour visitation revealed the depth of collective love
- Small gestures—like a stranger giving her a purple stone—became symbols of care
- A lifelong mentor reminded her: “The reason it hurts so much is because there’s so much love.”
We explore how grief is not something to “get over,” but something that reshapes identity. Annalise reflects on:
- Learning that grief is love with nowhere to go
- How time becomes nonlinear after loss
- The importance of letting grief move through the body rather than avoiding it
- How she and her husband grieved differently, yet both authentically
- The role of writing, walking, and trusted relationships in processing pain
She shares deeply personal and beautiful ways she continues to honor Ann-Marie:
- Weekly writing with a local writer to preserve memories
- Designing a headstone that reflects her daughter’s artistic, joyful spirit
- A cartwheeling mermaid with fishnet tights—symbolizing her daughter’s wild authenticity
- Continuing traditions like birthday celebrations even after loss
- Receiving unexpected signs and meaning in everyday life
Annalise also reflects on becoming a mother again through IVF and the arrival of baby Leo. She shares the emotional synchronicities surrounding his conception and birth, and how his name—Leo—feels connected to Ann-Marie in meaningful, symbolic ways. Rather than replacing grief, this new life exists alongside it.
At the heart of the conversation is a powerful truth:
- You can hold joy and sorrow at the same time
- Life does not require choosing one or the other
- Healing is not linear, but deeply relational and embodied
- Love does not end—it changes form
She closes with a reflection on what it means to live fully human:
- Those who struggle most are often those who resist holding multiple truths
- Beauty and tragedy will always coexist in a full life
- Feeling joy fully is just as important as allowing grief in
This episode is a tender exploration of love, loss, and the enduring connection between a mother and her daughter—an invitation to stay open to the fullness of life, even when it hurts.
Past Episodes You Might Like About Grief, Loss, and Motherhood:
Episode 30: Grief: It’s Complicated
Episode 122: Nina Lohman: The Body Alone: A Lyrical Articulation of Pain
Episode 192: Anne Marie Nest-Pinero & Kristin Marrs: Performance Art that Educates About Infertility & Miscarriage
Today’s Episode sponsored by:
Kate Moreland Coaching (https://www.katemorelandcoach
Dr Yoga Momma (https://dryogamomma.com/)
Heartland Yoga (https://heartlandyoga.com/)
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