EPISODE · Mar 20, 2026 · 14 MIN
The Kids Are Alright
from Structure & Scars
Send us Fan MailWhen a celebrity dies and you feel something that seems too big for someone you never met — that grief is not disproportionate. For kids who grew up in homes where the adults were inconsistent, conditional, or unsafe, the characters on the screen weren’t entertainment. They were attachment figures. They held the template for what safe and consistent looked like when nobody at home was modeling it. In this episode, recorded the day Chuck Norris died, we talk about what parasocial attachment actually is, why the grief is real, and the long arc from finding safety on a screen to recognizing it in real life. For the kids who were watching every week. You were paying attention. And it worked. Concepts referenced:• Parasocial relationships (Horton & Wohl, 1956)• Attachment theory and alternative attachment figures• Conditional vs. unconditional attachment• Nervous system co-regulation and media presence• Parasocial grief and celebrity death response• Developmental trauma and attachment template formation Key sources:• Horton, D. & Wohl, R.R. (1956). Mass communication and para-social interaction. Psychiatry, 19(3), 215–229.• Bowlby, J. (1969). Attachment and loss, Vol. 1: Attachment. Basic Books.• Ainsworth, M.D.S. et al. (1978). Patterns of attachment. Erlbaum.• Giles, D.C. (2002). Parasocial interaction: A review of the literature and a model for future research. Media Psychology, 4(3), 279–305.• Schemer, C. & Motherboard, S. (2021). Parasocial relationships and grief after celebrity death. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships.• Van der Kolk, B. (2014). The body keeps the score. Viking. [Developmental trauma and nervous system adaptation] Resources:• EMDRIA therapist directory (trauma-competent therapists): emdria.org/find-a-therapist• Open Path Collective (reduced-fee therapy): openpathcollective.org• Psychology Today therapist finder: psychologytoday.com/us/therapistsStructure & Scars Unfiltered dialogue about the structures that shape us.✉️ Continue the conversation: [email protected]
What this episode covers
Send us Fan Mail When a celebrity dies and you feel something that seems too big for someone you never met — that grief is not disproportionate. For kids who grew up in homes where the adults were inconsistent, conditional, or unsafe, the characters on the screen weren’t entertainment. They were attachment figures. They held the template for what safe and consistent looked like when nobody at home was modeling it. In this episode, recorded the day Chuck Norris died, we talk about what parasoc...
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The Kids Are Alright
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