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The Grief Journey By Mayrim

The Grief Journey By Mayrim

By: Miriam Ribiat
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When I launched Relief from Grief in 2022, I thought it would be a short-term project. But the feedback was overwhelming:

•Grievers found inspiration and comfort.

•Listeners who hadn’t experienced loss gained meaningful insights into grief.

•Professionals shared how valuable the podcast was for their clients.

I realized this podcast was meeting a deep, ongoing need — and I was determined to continue serving that need.
I’m honored to partner with Mayrim, an organization dedicated to supporting families who have lost a child. Mayrim is the perfect partner because its founders and members understand the pain of loss firsthand. It’s my hope that each guest shares encouragement and understanding, helping listeners feel less alone. Together, we can find hope and comfort — one moment at a time.

© 2026 The Grief Journey By Mayrim
Judaism Personal Development Personal Success Spirituality
Episodes
  • Mrs. Leah Paley: The Chapter That Lives On
    Jun 17 2026

    Your feedback is what keeps us going. Whether it’s positive, constructive, or somewhere in between — we appreciate it all. If you have thoughts, suggestions, or recommendations for our podcast, please share them with us!

    When the doctor said, “Your son Yossi failed remission,” his loving mother gently answered, “No, he didn’t fail remission. The chemotherapy failed to achieve remission.”

    But in a life guided by emunah, did the wording really matter, when they believed the outcome was always in Hashem’s hands?

    Still, Mrs. Leah Paley and her husband did everything they possibly could to help their son recover from leukemia.

    As Yossi lay in the hospital, his mother played a recording of the parshah he hoped to lain for his upcoming bar mitzvah, only a few weeks away. But six weeks before that long-awaited day, Yossi returned his holy neshamah to Hashem.

    The pain was immense. The loneliness was crushing. Back then, there was far less support for bereaved parents. Well-meaning friends cared deeply, but often did not know how to truly help.

    But Leah worked on herself. She worked deeply on her relationship with Hashem.

    One major turning point came through a remarkable experience involving a Sefer Torah dedicated l’ilui nishmas her son.

    Today, the Paleys live in Israel, where Leah found connection with other bereaved mothers. Those relationships became an important source of comfort and understanding in her grief journey. She is also a devoted volunteer for Mayrim, helping support other bereaved mothers.

    Yossi Paley will never be forgotten. He remains a beloved chapter in the Paley family story. The page may have turned, and life continued forward, but Yossi’s chapter is still deeply loved, remembered, and very much alive in the hearts of his family.

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsK24OSmIYG_XWzeplhfmb8LJcWKphITh&si=untn3fmHLLaEEFNm

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/relief-from-grief-by-mayrim/id1788349916

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3AvWNp0DrHqE5AVYJHooiK?si=ufpIObuGRumS5uFXmvrpgA

    Questions or feedback? Email me at: podcast@mayrim.org

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • Mrs. Faigie Horowitz: The Silent Grief of Grandparents
    May 27 2026

    Your feedback is what keeps us going. Whether it’s positive, constructive, or somewhere in between — we appreciate it all. If you have thoughts, suggestions, or recommendations for our podcast, please share them with us!

    The Silent Grief of Grandparents

    Mrs. Faigie Horowitz never planned on starting a support group for grandmothers who lost a married child. But then, within just three days, she met three different women living through that exact loss.

    One woman could barely speak about it. One was drowning in unbearable pain. And the other quietly said, “I follow my daughter’s lead.”

    Three grandmothers. Three reactions. One heartbreak that almost no one talks about. That was the moment Mrs. Horowitz realized: this grief needed a space of its own.

    And when she shared the idea of creating a support group for these grandmothers, the response was immediate: “Yes. This is needed.”

    In this deeply moving podcast episode, Mrs. Horowitz speaks about the complicated and often invisible grief of grandparents after the loss of a child who left behind a spouse and children.

    She also shares a powerful idea rooted in research: children who feel connected to their family story are often more resilient, confident, and emotionally grounded.

    It makes sense.
    Why do we still tell over Yetzias Mitzrayim generation after generation? Because stories shape identity.

    Similarly, when a parent dies, children are often left longing to know: What was my parent like? What made them laugh? What mattered to them?

    Sometimes those conversations feel too painful to ask directly. But through stories, memories, and connection to the larger family narrative, grandchildren can still feel deeply connected to where they come from — and to the parent they lost.

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsK24OSmIYG_XWzeplhfmb8LJcWKphITh&si=untn3fmHLLaEEFNm

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/relief-from-grief-by-mayrim/id1788349916

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3AvWNp0DrHqE5AVYJHooiK?si=ufpIObuGRumS5uFXmvrpgA

    Questions or feedback? Email me at: podcast@mayrim.org

    Show More Show Less
    45 mins
  • Rabbi Leo Dee: What if this is the way Hashem wanted it to be?
    Mar 18 2026

    Your feedback is what keeps us going. Whether it’s positive, constructive, or somewhere in between — we appreciate it all. If you have thoughts, suggestions, or recommendations for our podcast, please share them with us!

    After Rabbi Leo Dee lost his wife and two daughters in a terrorist attack, people asked many “what if” questions.
    What if you hadn’t moved from England?
    What if the whole family had been in one car?

    “Every one of those what-ifs went through my mind many times,” he shares.

    But then another question emerged:
    What if this is the way Hashem wanted it?

    Obviously this is the way it was meant to be.
    Does it hurt? Terribly.
    But it wasn’t a mistake.

    Rabbi Dee made the conscious choice not to remain trapped in his grief, forgetting those around him. His three surviving children still needed their father.

    And so, through tears and pain, he told them:
    “We just lived Chapter One of our lives. Now we turn the page to Chapter Two.”

    There may always be pain.
    But they will live with as much simcha as they can.

    Is it always easy? No.
    Is it possible? Yes.

    Do you want to hear how?

    Click below.

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsK24OSmIYG_XWzeplhfmb8LJcWKphITh&si=untn3fmHLLaEEFNm

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/relief-from-grief-by-mayrim/id1788349916

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3AvWNp0DrHqE5AVYJHooiK?si=ufpIObuGRumS5uFXmvrpgA

    Questions or feedback? Email me at: podcast@mayrim.org

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
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