Love doesn’t disappear when a life ends; it changes form, echoes through memory, and asks us to carry it with care. Kerry opens her heart about losing her brother, tracing the messy, holy overlap where grief and devotion meet. From hospital rooms and hard conversations to late-night prayers and quiet moments of knowing, she explores how faith, family, and the words we speak can soften the sharp edges of loss without denying the pain.
We walk through the realities many Black women face after a death: stepping into logistics, holding space for others, and pushing our own sorrow to the margins. Kerry names that pattern and offers another way—healthy grief that honors both the loved one and the self. She talks about rejecting toxic positivity, meeting people where they are, and recognizing how language shapes our days. If every word is a seed, what are we planting when we speak about our lives, our hopes, and our healing?
This conversation holds tender details from her brother’s final days, including the moment of peace that followed his last breath. It also holds practices you can use now: simple rituals for remembrance, boundaries that protect your heart, and permission to let joy and ache share the same room. Grief is love’s echo, not its enemy. By allowing both to stand together, we build a resilient life—one that remembers, honors, and keeps moving with grace.
If this story meets you where you are, share it with someone who needs the reminder that they’re not alone. And if you have your own story of love and loss, connect with us on Instagram at the Melanin Unicorn Podcast and tell us what helped you keep going. Subscribe, leave a review, and help this message find the people who need it most.