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In this episode of The 10 Ninety Podcast, Mason sits down with two parents whose lives were forever changed by the loss of their children — and who found an unexpected connection through that shared grief.
Chris Craven lost her son Wyatt just days before his sixth birthday after a seven-month fight with AML, a rare and aggressive blood cancer. Jessica McInnes lost her 15-year-old son Race in just 48 hours, after a brain tumor was discovered only when it was already too late. Two very different journeys. One unimaginable heartbreak.
Together, Mason, Chris, and Jessica have an unfiltered conversation about what it really means to live after loss:
The quiet, enduring loneliness that never fully fades
Why grief can make you feel like you're losing your mind — and why that's part of being human
The question no parent should ever have to consider: is it harder to lose slowly, or instantly?
Guilt, second-guessing, and the mind's need to find meaning in the unexplainable
How losing a child reshapes your identity, your relationships, and your view of the world
The unexpected role of humor in surviving the darkest moments
Signs, spirituality, and the hope (or question) of something beyond this life
What truly helps — and what doesn't — when someone you love is facing the unthinkable
Seven years out. Three and a half years out. The grief doesn't go away — but it changes shape. And somehow, so do you.
This is a conversation about loss, yes — but also about connection, resilience, and the ways we keep going when life doesn't make sense.
⚠️ Content Warning: This episode includes discussions of child loss, cancer, grief, and death.
By Mason Sawyer4.8
159159 ratings
In this episode of The 10 Ninety Podcast, Mason sits down with two parents whose lives were forever changed by the loss of their children — and who found an unexpected connection through that shared grief.
Chris Craven lost her son Wyatt just days before his sixth birthday after a seven-month fight with AML, a rare and aggressive blood cancer. Jessica McInnes lost her 15-year-old son Race in just 48 hours, after a brain tumor was discovered only when it was already too late. Two very different journeys. One unimaginable heartbreak.
Together, Mason, Chris, and Jessica have an unfiltered conversation about what it really means to live after loss:
The quiet, enduring loneliness that never fully fades
Why grief can make you feel like you're losing your mind — and why that's part of being human
The question no parent should ever have to consider: is it harder to lose slowly, or instantly?
Guilt, second-guessing, and the mind's need to find meaning in the unexplainable
How losing a child reshapes your identity, your relationships, and your view of the world
The unexpected role of humor in surviving the darkest moments
Signs, spirituality, and the hope (or question) of something beyond this life
What truly helps — and what doesn't — when someone you love is facing the unthinkable
Seven years out. Three and a half years out. The grief doesn't go away — but it changes shape. And somehow, so do you.
This is a conversation about loss, yes — but also about connection, resilience, and the ways we keep going when life doesn't make sense.
⚠️ Content Warning: This episode includes discussions of child loss, cancer, grief, and death.

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