Unparented: A Dead Parents Club Podcast
I'm Robert. I lost my dad at 15 and my mom at 26. Now I'm a husband and father trying to figure out what it means to build a life when the people who shaped yours are gone.
Unparented isn't about the dramatic moments of grief, it's about what comes after. The Tuesday afternoons when you reach for your phone to call them. The milestones they'll never see. The weird, unexpected ways loss reshapes you.
In these conversations, I talk with people navigating life without their parents, therapists, grief counselors, CEOs, entrepreneurs, and others who are building lives shaped by loss. We share raw, honest stories about grief, growth, and the strange territory of being unparented.
If you've lost a parent, or you love someone who has, this is for you.
Learn more and share your story at unparented.me
I'm Robert. I lost my dad at 15 and my mom at 26. Now I'm a husband and father trying to figure out what it means to build a life when the people who shaped yours are gone.
Unparented isn't about the dramatic moments of grief, it's about what comes after. The Tuesday afternoons when you reach for your phone to call them. The milestones they'll never see. The weird, unexpected ways loss reshapes you.
In these conversations, I talk with people navigating life without their parents, therapists, grief counselors, CEOs, entrepreneurs, and others who are building lives shaped by loss. We share raw, honest stories about grief, growth, and the strange territory of being unparented.
If you've lost a parent, or you love someone who has, this is for you.
Learn more and share your story at unparented.me
Episodes

Friday Feb 06, 2026
Ten Years of Running
Friday Feb 06, 2026
Friday Feb 06, 2026
Ten years. That's how long I stayed away from Rochester, the place where I grew up, where my parents died, where my grandparents finished raising me after everything fell apart. I told myself there was nothing left for me there. But the truth? I was running.
This episode is different. It's just me. No guest, no interview. Just me telling you about what happened when I finally went back. I took my wife and daughters to Rochester for the first time. I showed them the house I grew up in, the door I took apart as a kid, the deck where I'd eat the salt off pretzels and throw them in the snow. I took my four-year-old daughter to meet her grandpa at the mausoleum. She walked right up and said, "Hi Grandpa, I love you." And I lost it.
Then she asked me where my mom was. Four words from the backseat of a rental car that I had no answer to. "I don't know, sweetheart. Daddy doesn't know where she's buried." I didn't go to my mom's funeral. And sitting in that car, unable to answer my daughter's question, wasn't about guilt. It was about not having a place to bring her. No grave, no mausoleum. Just nothing.
But here's what I learned: the parts of yourself you think you left behind are never really gone. They're just waiting for you to come back and find them. And going back to the place you've been avoiding might be exactly how you realize how far you've actually come. This one's raw. This one's real. And if you've ever run from a place that hurt you, I think you'll feel this one.
In this episode:
Why I stayed away from Rochester for 10 years
The moment on the plane when it all hit me
Taking my daughter to meet her grandpa for the first time
The question I couldn't answer: "Where's your mom?"
Why I didn't go to my mom's funeral and what that means now
How being there unlocked memories I thought were gone
Seeing my sister, aunt, and uncle after all these years
The difference between running from grief and growing through it
What the surfer's mindset taught me about grief and joy
Why I'm not afraid anymore
Going back to Rochester didn't crush me like I thought it would. It reminded me that grief and life can exist in the same place. That I'm not that scared kid anymore. And that maybe, just maybe, I don't have to run anymore.
š Visit the podcast website: https://unparented.meāļø Read more on Substack: https://substack.com/@robertdelfaveš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.mešø Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Sunday Jan 25, 2026
The Dark House Within: Rebuilding Your Identity After It Fractures
Sunday Jan 25, 2026
Sunday Jan 25, 2026
This week, I'm talking with Liam J. Wakefield, a psychotherapist, counseling lecturer, and former British Army soldier who's built his entire practice around a question most of us avoid: what happens when the person you were completely falls apart?
Liam lost his mother to abandonment as a child, went to war at 21, and was medically retired from the military after a chronic illness dismantled the identity he'd spent years building. He's faced grief not just from death, but from the loss of self: the fracturing that happens when the architecture of who you are can no longer hold.
What makes Liam's work different is that he doesn't see healing as putting yourself back together. He sees it as learning to hold the tension between all the fractured parts: the grieving child, the masked adult, the angry protector, the exhausted survivor. He calls it "the self as continually becoming," and it's completely changed how I think about rebuilding after loss.
We talk about the masks we wear to survive, the parts of ourselves we abandon to keep going, and why grief isn't something you get over. It's something you learn to carry differently. Liam also walks me through his "dark house within" practice, a tool he uses to help people visualize and navigate the psychological architecture they've built around their wounds.
This conversation is deep, honest, and deeply human. If you've ever felt like you've lost yourself in grief or in just trying to survive, this one will hit.
We get into:
the abandoned parts of ourselves we leave behind to survive
what it means to fracture and why it's not the same as breaking
the masks we wear and which "hands" are holding them up
his journey from rock and roll to the military to psychotherapy
why he believes suffering is an initiation into growth
the "dark house within" exercise and how it maps your psyche
how children experience grief when their needs aren't met
why authenticity is impossible and why that's okay
the parliament of parts inside all of us
voice dialogue therapy and giving your inner conflicts a voice
why time doesn't heal, it just gives perspective
how to rebuild psychological architecture after it collapses
what it means to become "more than you ever felt possible"
Liam's story is a reminder that you're not broken just because you're in pieces. Sometimes the fractures are where the growth happens.
š Learn more about Liam's work: https://liamjwakefield.comšø Follow Liam on Instagram: @liamjwakefieldš° Read Liam's articles in Hinton Magazine
š Visit the podcast website: https://unparented.meāļø Read more on Substack: https://substack.com/@robertdelfaveš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.mešø Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Thursday Jan 08, 2026
When We Start Laughing, We Start Healing
Thursday Jan 08, 2026
Thursday Jan 08, 2026
This week, I'm sitting down with Erica Richmond, a writer, grief guide, and founder of Open Sky Stories. Erica lost her ex-husband to suicide when their kids were just seven and ten. Eleven years later, she lost her dad. She's been living in grief for over a decade and has learned that the only way through it is to let it be as messy as it needs to be.
What stands out about Erica is how she's held space for her kids to grieve in their own ways. They made a Lego figurine of their dad and called him Lego Dad. Her youngest drew pictures with his dad in a coffin or as a floating head in the sky. And when her ten year old asked if cremation was done with a laser beam or a flamethrower, she just went with it. Because sometimes that's all you can do.
We talk about the exhaustion and blur that comes with grief, how she grew to resent being called resilient, and why dark humor became her family's way of surviving. Erica also shares how writing and creating art helped her process what words alone couldn't touch, and how that eventually became Open Sky Stories, a space for others to do the same.
This conversation is honest, funny, and full of the kind of realness that only comes from someone who's been in the thick of it. If you've ever felt like you weren't grieving the right way, this one's for you.
We get into:
what surprised her most about losing her dad at 49
how her kids expressed grief through play and art
the question her son asked about cremation that caught her off guard
why she grew to resent being called resilient
the blur that comes with grief and what it actually feels like
how dark humor became a lifeline for her family
the grief group that helped more than she expected
why writing and art give her something talking can't
what she built with Open Sky Stories
what healing means when you're never really over it
Erica's story is a reminder that grief doesn't have to look a certain way. Sometimes it looks like Lego Dad. Sometimes it looks like laughing at a meet and greet for dead grandpa. And that's okay.
š Learn more about Erica's work: https://openskystories.com šø Follow Erica on Instagram: @openskystories š Visit the podcast website: https://unparented.me āļø Read more on Substack: https://substack.com/@robertdelfave š© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.me šø Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Thursday Dec 18, 2025
I'm Sick of Grief Taking So Much Away From Me
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
This week, I'm sitting down with Sylvia Wolfer, a grief-informed practitioner who has experienced loss on a level that's hard to wrap your head around. She lost her father at seven. Her younger brother at 17. Her older brother at 40. And then her mother a few years later. From a family of six, only Sylvia and one brother remain.
What makes this conversation different is how Sylvia has turned all of that loss into something she can actually use. Not just for herself, but for others. After years of being ambushed by grief triggers, she got angry. Not at the loss itself, but at how much grief had taken from her. She felt like she had missed out on time with her older brother because she was still so buried in grief from her younger brother's death. When he died too, something shifted. She decided she was done letting grief run the show.
We talk about the neuroscience of grief, what's actually happening in the brain when we lose someone, and why understanding that can be strangely comforting. Sylvia explains the three-dimensional map the brain uses for relationships and why we still reach for the phone to call someone who's gone. She also shares practical tools for managing grief triggers, tending to the body when the heart and mind are overwhelmed, and why she schedules time to grieve on her own terms.
This one gets into the science, but it never loses the human side. Sylvia is warm, honest, and somehow still full of love for life after everything she's been through. If you've ever felt like grief has taken too much from you, this conversation might help you start taking some of it back.
We get into:
what it was like losing her father suddenly at seven years old
the gift her dad's death gave her, seeing the good in people
why sudden loss is especially hard on the brain
the three-dimensional map and why we still want to call people who are gone
how she realized her nervous system was completely dysregulated
the window of tolerance and how grief shrinks it
why she schedules time to grieve instead of letting it ambush her
tending to the body when the head and heart are too overwhelmed
how she continues relationships with people who are no longer here
her digital courses, guided meditations, and writing on grief
Sylvia's story is proof that grief doesn't have to take everything. Sometimes, it can be the thing that finally makes you fight back.
š Learn more about Sylvia's work: https://sylviawolfer.com šø Follow Sylvia on Instagramš§ Sylvia's Voice on Spotifyš§ Sylvia's Voice on Apple Podcastsš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.me šø Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Friday Dec 05, 2025
Caring for the Parent Who Never Cared
Friday Dec 05, 2025
Friday Dec 05, 2025
This week, I'm sitting down with Arnold, a former corporate executive turned brain fitness coach, to talk about what it means to grow up in a home where love wasn't really on the table. His father was a military officer who brought command and control into every corner of family life. His mother, numbed by decades of SSRIs, seemed to exist in her own world. A coach once told Arnold he was "the man who grew up without love," and that phrase hit him like a freight train.
Arnold lost his father at 41. He describes it as a liberation, not a loss. The constant weight of never being good enough finally lifted. Years later, he spent eight years caring for his mother as dementia and Parkinson's slowly took over. What surprised him most? He actually liked her more during those final years. With the dementia came something he had never seen before: the real version of his mother, unfiltered by status and expectation.
We talk about what it's like to grieve someone you never fully had, how watching a parent decline can spark unexpected purpose, and why Arnold decided to channel all of it into brain fitness. He now helps people optimize their brains before decline ever sets in, because he saw firsthand what happens when prevention isn't part of the conversation.
This conversation covers heavy ground, but Arnold doesn't sugarcoat anything. He's honest about the family dynamics that shaped him, the conscious choice to become the opposite of his father, and the daily rituals that keep him grounded now. If you've ever felt like grief made you rebuild your entire identity, this one will resonate.
We get into:
what it felt like when his father's death brought relief instead of sadness
the moment on a bike ride that sparked his mission around brain health
why his mother seemed more "real" after dementia set in
the conscious decision to care for a mother who had never really cared for him
how negative examples can be more powerful than positive ones
the inner critic and why being kind to yourself sounds simple but isn't
what he would tell anyone watching a parent decline right now
why curiosity might be the simplest thing you can do for your brain
Arnold's story is a reminder that grief doesn't always look like sadness. Sometimes it looks like freedom. Sometimes it looks like finally becoming the person you were always supposed to be.
š Learn more about Arnold's brain fitness work: https://braingym.fitness š© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.me šø Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Wednesday Nov 19, 2025
What Happens When You Lose the People Who Made You?
Wednesday Nov 19, 2025
Wednesday Nov 19, 2025
This week, Iām sitting down with journalist, author, and former CNN Senior Copy Editor John DeDakis to talk about the kind of loss that rearranges everything you think you know about yourself. John lost his mother first. Years later, he watched his father take his final breath right in front of him. He describes the aftermath as feeling āorphaned at 45,ā and it became the moment that forced him to confront grief in a way he had avoided for years.
John walks through what it felt like to lose the last parent, how childhood memories hit differently once theyāre both gone, and the surprising guilt that shows up long after you think youāre doing fine. We talk about what happens to your identity when the people who shaped you are suddenly gone, how men often grieve in silence, and how long it can take to admit that youāre not actually okay.
This conversation is raw in the best way. John doesnāt give polished, perfect answers. He tells the truth. The result is a conversation that meets you right where grief usually lives: in the quiet parts of your life that no one sees.
We get into:⢠what it was like to be with his father during his final moments⢠the anger and shame he carried for years⢠why losing a parent in adulthood can be harder than people expect⢠the ways grief sneaks up even decades later⢠how writing became one of the ways he made meaning⢠what helps when you canāt āmove onā⢠what he wishes he could tell anyone grieving right now
Johnās story is honest, painful, and strangely comforting. If youāve lost one or both parents, youāll probably hear pieces of your own story in his. Thatās the gift of these conversations. They remind you youāre not the only one trying to navigate a life without the people who raised you.
š Learn more about Johnās books, writing, and workshops: https://johndedakis.com/š„ Watch Johnās interviews and writing discussions on Youtubeš¼ Connect with John on LinkedInš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.mešø Follow the podcast on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Wednesday Oct 29, 2025
Next Level Grief: Turning Pain into Purpose with Alan Lazaros
Wednesday Oct 29, 2025
Wednesday Oct 29, 2025
In this episode of Unparented: A Dead Parents Club Podcast, I sit down with Alan Lazaros, CEO of Next Level University, a global top 100 podcast dedicated to helping others level up in life, love, health, and wealth. Alan lost his father in a car accident when he was just two years old, a loss that created deep pain and a sense of disconnection that would shape his entire journey. Decades later, after surviving his own near-fatal car accident, Alan found himself questioning everything: his choices, his identity, and the trajectory of his life. Instead of running from grief, he decided to turn it into purpose.
Alan shares how the chip on his shoulder fueled his success in corporate America, and why he ultimately stepped away to create lasting impact through honest conversations and personal growth. We talk about family, loss, therapy, finding meaning after tragedy, and Alanās powerful belief that the hardest moments can become the foundation for helping others.
His story is raw, vulnerable, and full of hope, a reminder that grief doesnāt have to end our story, but can become the starting point for a whole new chapter.
š Learn more about Alanās work and podcast: Next Level Universityšø Follow Alan on Instagram: @alazaros88š„ Watch on YouTube: Next Level University Podcastš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me:Ā hello@unparented.mešø Follow on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Wednesday Oct 15, 2025
A Surfers Mindset: A Lesson for Life and Grief with Angie Hawkins
Wednesday Oct 15, 2025
Wednesday Oct 15, 2025
What can surfing teach us about grief, resilience, and learning to live in the present?
In this episode of Unparented: A Dead Parents Club Podcast, I sit down with Angie Hawkins, author of Running in Slippers and a coach helping high-achieving women let go of external validation. Angie lost her dad in 2017, a loss that sent her into the deepest grief sheād ever known and ultimately into a journey of healing, transformation, and connection with her father on the other side.
Angie shares how surfing became more than a daily practice in Hawaii, it became a metaphor for life and grief. From the āsurferās mindsetā of savoring the ride without fearing the end, to the slow work of rebuilding identity after loss, Angieās story is raw, vulnerable, and deeply human. We talk about growing up with emotionally unavailable parents, the weight of guilt after an estranged relationship, the darkness of isolation and even a suicide attempt, and how she slowly found her way back to light, purpose, and joy.
Her story is a reminder that grief has no timeline, that healing can come in unexpected waves, and that our relationships with those weāve lost donāt have to end, they simply change.
š Learn more about Angieās work and book: runninginslippers.comšø Follow Angie on Instagram: @angiehawkinscoachingš„ Watch on YouTube: Unparented Podcastš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.mešø Follow on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Wednesday Oct 01, 2025
Learning to Grieve After Losing a Mom | Lisaās Story
Wednesday Oct 01, 2025
Wednesday Oct 01, 2025
What happens when you lose your mom at just 18 years old, before youāve even had the chance to figure out who you are?
In this episode of Unparented: A Dead Parents Club Podcast, I sit down with Lisa Espinosa, a writer, speaker, and certified grief and loss counselor, to talk about the life-altering experience of losing her mom as a teenager. Lisa shares how her momās death from lung cancer shaped her early adulthood, what it taught her about love, presence, and faith, and how it later influenced the way she mothered and now āMimiāsā her own family.
Lisa opens up about how she didnāt grieve well at first, the pressure she felt to be āstrong,ā and the unhealthy ways she tried to minimize her pain. She also shares how she eventually learned that grief isnāt something to get over, but something we learn to carry. From her mom sewing her wedding dress while sick, to the everyday lessons of presence and love, Lisaās story is a reminder of how deeply our parents leave their mark on us.
We also talk about faith, the story of Job, and why Lisa believes that faith isnāt a magic formula, itās trusting God even when life doesnāt make sense.
If youāve ever lost a mother, or struggled with how to grieve as a young adult, Lisaās story will remind you that even in profound loss, there is still room for hope, meaning, and joy.
š Learn more about Lisaās work: lisaespinoza.comšø Follow Lisa on Instagram: @lisa.espinozaš„ Watch on YouTube: Unparented Podcastš© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.mešø Follow on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast

Wednesday Sep 17, 2025
A Fatherās Story of Love and Loss | Sean Foster on Grief
Wednesday Sep 17, 2025
Wednesday Sep 17, 2025
What happens when your children lose their mom before theyāre old enough to remember her?
In this episode of Unparented: A Dead Parents Club Podcast, I sit down with Sean Foster, host of The Next Minute, to talk about what it means to raise two boys in the shadow of grief. Seanās wife, Taylor, died in 2020 just 12 hours after giving birth to their youngest son, leaving him a grieving husband and single father overnight.
Sean shares the reality of carrying not only his own grief but also the grief of his sons, helping them process emotions they donāt yet have words for, creating rituals to keep their mom present, and learning how differently children express loss at each age. He opens up about guilt, loneliness, and the anxiety that once kept him from making memories with his boys, and the turning point that helped him reclaim joy with them.
If youāve ever wondered how children grieve, or how a parent can hold space for their kidsā pain while still working through their own, this conversation will remind you that love and loss are forever intertwined.
šļø Listen to Seanās podcast: The Next Minute
š„ Watch on YouTube: Unparented Podcast
š© Want to share your story on Unparented? Email me: hello@unparented.me
šø Follow on Instagram: @theunparentedpodcast


