In this episode of The Internal Shift Show, Debbie Longo speaks with Zander Sprague about the devastating loss of his sister Lucy, who was murdered in 1996, and the emotional transformation that followed.
What began as overwhelming grief, depression, confusion, and emotional isolation eventually became a turning point that reshaped Zander’s life and direction. He openly shares the reality of sibling loss, the loneliness that often comes with unacknowledged grief, and the emotional impact of feeling invisible while others focused mainly on how his parents were coping.
Zander explains how difficult the early stages of grief were and how he became trapped in the cycle of asking “why did this happen?” repeatedly, searching for answers that would never fully come. One of the biggest internal shifts in his healing process came when he accepted that he would never truly know why the tragedy happened. Letting go of that question allowed him to stop circling emotionally and begin focusing on healing, rebuilding, and creating meaning from the experience.
He also discusses the importance of exercise, therapy, support systems, and open conversations during grief recovery. Over time, Zander realized there were very few resources specifically focused on sibling loss. Instead of remaining silent, he chose to write about his experiences to help others who felt alone in their grief. That decision eventually led him to become an advocate, speaker, author, and thought leader focused on sibling grief and emotional healing.
Today, Zander works to bring awareness to the emotional reality of sibling loss and the importance of acknowledging grief rather than minimizing it. Through his writing and advocacy work, he helps people understand that healing does not mean forgetting—it means learning how to carry the loss while continuing to move forward with purpose and meaning.
Contact Debbie Longo, Transformational Coach:
Website: https://lifeinbloomny.net
Email: debbie@lifeinbloomny.net
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/debbie-longo-life-in-bloom-ny/
Contact Zander Sprague:
Website: ZanderSprague.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/epic_begins/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@epicbegins
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ZanderSprague/
Epic Begins With 1 Step Forward Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/EPIC-Begins-Step-Forward-Achieve/dp/097950306X/ref=sr_1_1
Making Lemonade: Choosing A Positive Pathway After Losing Your Sibling Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/MAKING-LEMONADE-Choosing-Positive-Pathway/dp/0979503019/ref=sr_1_1
Why Don’t They Cry?: Understanding Your Living Child’s Grief Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Why-Dont-They-Cry-Understanding/dp/0979503043/ref=sr_1_1
Welcome to the Internal Shift Show. I'm Debbie
Longo, Transformational Coach. This show explores
how the way we think, decide, and respond internally
influences where we end up over time. Today's
conversation draws on real experience and expertise
to look at how small internal shifts can change
direction, momentum, and outcomes. I'm joined
by a very special guest today, Xander Sprague.
Xander, good afternoon. Welcome to the show.
Thank you so much for having me on, Debbie. Thank
you for being here. I'm going to ask you to tell
your story today and point out a part in your
story where you were went through a change a
life change or a traumatic experience or something
like that and you went through a process and
you came out the other side and that. And results
should always be positive or the result of whatever
it is that we're talking about. Now, I do this
show for a few different reasons. And one reason
is that everybody has their own individual story.
But there are stories that people can relate
to and other people's stories. Now, maybe somebody
is stuck in a situation that they are in or a
scenario. Maybe somebody thinks that. this is
gonna be normal. This is the way that their life
is gonna be. Maybe somebody doesn't know how
to get out of a certain situation that they're
in. It could be even just a problem or a feeling
or just a thought. It could be anything. That's
the reason why I do this show and also for education.
So somebody could say, wow, I'm going through
this same thing and this person got through this
and it doesn't sound so bad. It sounds like I
can get through it. It sounds like I can go I
can do it So also for motivation. So these are
some of the reasons why I have it So if you could
please do that for me, thank you. I would appreciate
it. Absolutely so the thing I wanted to talk
about was 29 years ago, my older sister Lucy
was murdered and there were that was in 1996
and There are many things I thought I might deal
with in my life But to be honest, murder really
was not one of them. I remember when I got the
phone call from my father, my father was a, was
a good storyteller and it took them a long time
to get to the point. There were a lot of details,
which looking back for perhaps superfluous, but
I get why, you know, why it took so long. This
was obviously incredibly difficult to tell. myself
and to tell my younger sister, but I just never
in a million years would have thought that that
would have happened. And I remember driving in
at the time I was living in just outside of Boston.
I was driving into my parents' house in Boston.
I was thinking about all the things that I was
going to have to do because this, I knew this
was the worst possible thing that could have
happened to my parents. And I thought they'd
sort of be catatonic in the corner. Well, luckily
my parents, were a lot more resilient than I
gave them credit. Funny how kids always think
their parents aren't resilient, and yet we are.
So it was a really, I mean, it's devastating
to lose a sibling. And I didn't even know how
to really process that. The next day, my father
and I had to fly to Chicago where my sister was
living and was murdered. And we had to talk to
the police and the DA. We had to go identify
our body. All of this incredibly traumatic and
it was overwhelming. And so after we get through
the funeral and all of that, honestly, it felt
like I fell off a cliff. I went from having too
many people around to having no one around as
I started to navigate my way through. How am
I going to start to heal? I discovered that there's
not. A lot of resources for siblings. Uh, one
of the experiences I had and honestly still have
not as much, but I, I, a lot of people knew,
knew my family from Boston. People would see
me on the street and go, Oh my gosh, Zen or how
are your parents? Now one person asked how I
was. And I had, I had these moments where I thought
my loss was less significant than my parents.
And the fact of the matter is that, no, it's
not less significant. It's equally as, it's equally
as significant. Just a few facts. The longest
relationships we have in our life are with our
siblings. We reasonably expect that that relationship,
barring someone having a known illness or something
is going to last the majority of our lifetime.
I was 28. Lucy was 30. A really important chapter
ended. At first it was really hard. It was a
struggle just to get out of bed. I was so tired.
The depression was there. One of the things that
I discovered that really helped was even though
it was really hard, I got myself back into the
gym. I started to exercise and exercises. It's
so important to break that circle of depression.
Cause what happens is you feel depressed, which
makes you tired, which makes you sleep more,
which makes you more depressed, which just keeps
the circle going. And I found. That once I started
to exercise again, that I was kind of breaking
that cycle because while exercise releases endorphins,
that's our natural antidepressant. One of those
big moments for me was on the Massachusetts turnpike,
where it's probably about four months into my
journey, where I had been struggling with why
did this happen? Really just kept circling around
on that. And I just had a moment of clarity where
I'm like, I'm not going to have the answer to
that question. So I need to let go of that because
I will spend the rest of my life trying to find
that answer. And I'm not, I'm just not going
to have that answer. I need to let go of that.
And when I had that moment, it was like this
weight was lifted off of me. I wasn't just stuck
in this circle and I was able to start to move
forward. Let's fast forward a little. I was,
I moved out, out to San Francisco. I love San
Francisco Bay area. It's where I live. And I
had coffee with a friend of mine. And as probably
about four years after Lucy was killed, she had
just lost her brother and I was just someone
from college. I was like, let me be there to
support you. I know how this is. And like any
traumatic or, or hard event, it's always. Nice
to be able to talk to someone else who's who's
going through this. There's so much of that conversation
that you get to have where you get to talk about
the things that you really want to talk about
and your friends are great. You're your friends
really want to help you. But when you have to
spend 20 minutes explaining where you're coming
from to get to the thing that you want to talk
about, they just can't, they don't know. I mean,
it's, it's like trying to explain what's like
what it is to. play in snow. If you've never
done it, I could be really descriptive, but if
you haven't done it, you don't know. But she
said something interesting. She said, I, I went
to the bookstore and there were lots of books
on loss of a parent, loss of a child, loss of
a pet, but there was really nothing on loss of
a sibling. And as I walked away from that, I
had another one of those aha moments. I'm like,
well, I know about that. So I wrote a book because
I was like, I don't want other sibling survivors
to have to go through this. Like there's, there's
gotta be help. And maybe I'm part of that help.
So I wrote the book and first of all, let me
say, I'm a talker, not a typer. So I had to figure
out how to write a book, end up dictating the
book. And it was really cathartic to be able
to write about my experience. I reached out to
friends of mine who had also lost siblings and,
and they were nice enough to answer some questions.
So there was sort of a, there was a good resource
for, for people. And then I sat on the book for
five years because I was afraid to release it.
I was afraid people wouldn't like it. And that's
an important part of the journey for me, the
fear of, of actually putting out into the world.
about what happened. I was really scared, but
I got tired of hearing myself say, I'm coming
out with a book because I wasn't, I wasn't doing
anything to make it happen. And I think that's
true for a lot of things. We say we can do something,
but if we're not actually doing it, then we're
not. So I released the book, surprisingly, or
to my own surprise, people liked it. And that
actually started me on this whole journey of
really working to advocate for sibling survivors
to help get the word out. I really want for people
who've lost a brother or sister to know that
help is available, that there are resources to
change that conversation. So it's not, how are
your parents, but how is the family doing? How
are the siblings doing? Cause it's so hard. It
feels really lonely. It was really hard that
my grief wasn't acknowledged. I struggled with
that. Like, as I said, that idea that I somehow,
my loss was less significant and it's not, here's
just a startling statistic for you. In the United
States, there's over 1 .3 million new sibling
survivors every single year. My book came out
in first edition, came out in 2008. So there's
roughly 18 million new sibling survivors since
my book came out. That's a lot of people. And
there are. To not know where, where you can go
and talk to people who, who get it. I often joke
that I'm walking down the street, but I don't
have, there's no pen I wear. There's no secret
handshake or hand signal to say I'm a sibling
survivor. Cause I guarantee when I'm, when I'm
just out and about and I'm talking to people
and I. I share about Lucy. So many people are
like, Oh, I lost my brother or sister. And sadly,
a lot of times I'm one of the first people they've
got gotten to talk about their loss. Some families
simply don't even acknowledge that that person
was ever alive. There's no pictures. They don't
talk about the birthday. They don't talk about
them. And that can be really hard. I think a
lot of people need to talk through, talk about
their loss, what they're feeling, what they miss.
Look, I don't canonize my sister. She was a fantastic
person, but there were days where she was really
not nice to me. And that is true of any sibling
relationship. One of the things I discovered
is both my sisters are some of my best friends.
They know me better than I know myself, and I
know them better than they know themselves. And
think about like, With with your siblings when
you guys when you get into an argument, you don't
start off nice You you swing for the fences,
you know, you have the dirt on them. They have
the dirt on you You're throwing the things that
you know is going to to hurt them the thing that
they're embarrassed about that they don't want
to admit and When that's gone, it's so hard.
There's just those conversations as I'm getting
older And my mom is aging. It's great to be able
to talk to my younger sister about what's going
on or when parents inevitably annoy you or get
on you about something. And for some people,
there were only two children and one of them
died. So now they have no one else. One of the
things that I discovered was that there were
new expectations for me. I was the middle child.
It was great. I tucked him behind Lucy. I got
to watch her make all kinds of mistakes and like,
well, I'm not going to do it that way. Now all
of a sudden I'm the oldest child, depending on
what your family, how your family is and perhaps
culture or religion, the oldest child, there
are certain expectations. I all of a sudden got,
I had a job at 28 that I had no training for,
you know, that, that journey is difficult. Everyone's
grief journey is different. And there isn't any
right way to do it. I'll tell you the one question
that people still say to me. And I'm like, wow,
I wish people wouldn't say this. People say,
Oh, you're not over losing your sister. No, I'm
never going to be over losing Lucy. I say that
and people, people smile and they laugh and go,
well, of course. And yet people still say it
to me 29 years later. And I'm like, no, what
I like to say is. I'm working my way through
the loss some days better than others. I talk
about Lucy almost every day. In part, that's
my own choice to say every day I have a choice
whether I want to talk about Lucy. And for me,
that's how I keep her alive in my life. My family
and I have a charitable foundation in Lucy's
memory. And we do all these really cool things
in Lucy's memory. And it feels so much better
to celebrate the rainbow that was Lucy's life.
And support causes that Lucy either, we know
she liked, or we're like, no, we, we think Lucy
would, would like this and would want us to support
this. It feels so much better to do that than
to just focus on the fact that my sister was
murdered. I lost her. She's not here. Yeah. That
doesn't change. That will never change. That
dot at the end, that blacked out at the end.
Yeah, that happened, but you want to know she
was a light for 30 years. There's, there's, there's
all this. stuff that she did and who she was.
And I'm like, it feels good to do, to do these
things. It's so much more positive to say, yes,
my sister died, but here's other stuff I'm doing.
I say all the time, I'm just a little busier
because I'm doing some extra work for Lucy. And
a big part of the work I just do in general is
around, as I said, supporting other sibling survivors.
One of the things that I discovered 19 years
into my journey. And I have to say, I wish I
would have known about this a lot, a lot sooner
is a great organization called the compassionate
friends, which is for families that have lost
a child or a sibling. And I currently full disclosure,
I am the sibling representative on the board
of directors, but I love this organization. It
is so great. to get to be in, in rooms with other
sibling survivors. And again, people who get
me, who see me, who acknowledge my grief, get
to talk to people about the stuff that's going
on that comes up, just all of those things. One
of the things that was really challenging and
less so now, cause I think they say time heals
and I don't know that it heals so much as you
just get more tools. that allow you to be able
to more effectively deal with what's coming up.
But one of the things that happens all the time
is you have those unexpected reminders of your
person. It could be a song on the radio. It could
be some kind, you know, could be perfume or cologne
or a scent of food, something, something, some
place that, that you go and that can derail your
day. And that certainly happened to me the first
Probably five years I'd be going along fine and
something song would come on the radio and then
all of a sudden It was a really hard day and
I found myself crying Fun fact about crying.
It's actually really good for us because when
we cry We have stress hormones that are coming
out through our tears that we're now getting
out So it's actually a really good thing for
us to to cry in supporting someone who's lost
a sibling Or anyone who's lost has some kind
of a loss and it just doesn't have to be death.
It could be end of a relationship, job, a pet,
something. If someone wants to cry, it's not
comfortable. But if you just sit there and gently
hold the space for them, it can be so helpful.
It was really hard. Those days I was having a
challenging time and my friends didn't know how
to deal with it. And they bailed. So now I felt
even more alone. I felt embarrassed that I had
the, that I was being emotional, but I couldn't
help it. It was normal. I say to people all the
time, you don't have a miracle sentence that
will make it better for me. And I don't have
a miracle sentence for you, but that's okay.
Sometimes even though it doesn't feel enough,
just saying, I'm so sorry for your loss, that
acknowledgement that you, that they've experience
something that's challenging is so important.
And it is so, yeah, I mean, I just go back to
acknowledgement of loss is, is important. Um,
I could never do a study to, to, to point towards
causality or something, but my experience over
the last 29 years is that unacknowledged grief
has this profound effect on people. And it can
lead to some not so healthy behaviors as a way
to cope with it. And perhaps if we all just said,
I'm so sorry for your loss. You don't have to
look again. What can someone say that will make
it better? We don't have that here in the United
States. I have to say we are absolutely horrible
at dealing with death. We sort of treat it like
it's the most communicable disease in the world.
Oh, Debbie, you, you, you experienced death.
If I talk to you, it might rub off on me and,
and, and so we'll talk. No, that's not the way
that that actually works. Okay. My sister was
murdered. If you got close to me and talk to
me, that doesn't mean that someone in your family
is now going to get murdered. It's they just
doesn't work that way. So talk to people. I'm
a really social person. When I went back to work,
everyone knew about it. Uh, this was. All over
the news, all my colleagues knew about it and
they'd come up and they'd sort of pause at my
cube and then they'd walk on. And I was sort
of prepared for people to talk to me, but then
they didn't talk to me. And for me personally,
it was like the worst possible torture of people
not talking to me. So I put up a sign that said,
it's okay to talk to me. I just gave people permission
to talk to me. And then people did. They started
to talk to me. Yeah, that was good. So what was
your process when you lost the sibling? Now we're
going to go all the way fast forward when you
wrote the book or when you were thinking about
writing the book. What was your feelings? What
was your thinking? How did you go through? I
don't know how many years it was, but how did
you go through that part of the process from
whatever it is that you could think of? You mean
from when I lost Lucy, do when I started to write
the book or when you started to think about writing
the book, when you, I mean, I honestly started
to think about writing the book as I was walking
away from this coffee shop because I'm like,
Oh, I know that I could write a book about that.
And then I went home and I actually just sat
down and kind of wrote out a rough outline. But
that process in between that, I mean, the first
thing was getting To in the movie Sleepless in
Seattle, Tom Hanks gets on the phone with the
radio psychologist and she asks how he's doing
and he says, well, I'm breathing in and I'm breathing
out and pretty soon I won't have to think about
that. And that really stuck with me when I was
going through this. Cause that literally was
where I was at. I got to, I got to remember to
breathe here. This feels so overwhelming. And
then. With a little time, I was able to not think
about breathing and to move on. As I said, letting
go of the why did this happen was a huge step
for me. When I'm talking with other sibling survivors,
sometimes they're just stuck at why did this
happen? I try and share what my own thought process,
which is I'm not going to know this. This just
isn't something I'm going to have an answer for.
Depending on what your own belief system is,
perhaps you say, all right, when I die, maybe
I'll find out. But along the way, I went to therapy
because I wanted a safe place to talk about it.
I wanted to make sure I felt like I was doing
okay, but I wanted some professional licensed
mental health help to just make sure I was actually
processing things well. Some people pull that
proverbial blanket over their head and don't
deal with it. But here's life goes on, whether
we participate today or not, our life is still
going on. And if you sort of don't want to deal
with it for 10 years, you want to know what 10
years has gone by. And I wanted to figure out
how I could deal with this. I wanted to talk.
I wanted to figure out how I could. Pull out
those memories of Lucy and not have it be sort
of like the life raft that you pull the cord
on and all of a sudden it just fills up the whole
space you're in. And that's how it was at the
beginning. As I said, some unexpected reminder
would just derail the day. My dad, probably about
nine months after Lucy died, I called him one
day. I was just talking to him and I asked how
his day was. He goes, Well, it was going pretty
good until I put my hand in this jacket and I
pulled, I had a, a matchbook from a diner he'd
gone to with Lucy a year before she died. And
he, and he's like, am I day my deal like half
my day derailed? I was just so sad about it.
I missed her so much. And my, and my family and
I honestly, for the last 29 years have talked
about. Lucy, we tell the stories, the good and
the bad. And I think that's important. I think
talking about who this person is helps keep them
alive in your, in your life. That's so important.
That's how we remember people is to talk about
them or do things. One of the things I did on
my healing journey was I did a, Created a basically
a music video to a song that was around in 1997
called gone away by the offspring. And it's sort
of a whole song about loss. And one of the lines
is you're up in heaven and I would trade if I
could, like, I miss you so bad. I, I mean, I
would trade and I went around the town. I took
video of. The town that we grew up in Massachusetts
and the schools that Lucy went to and other places.
And for me, that was incredibly cathartic. Writing
the book was really cathartic. I got to sit down
and talk about all of the process. Part of the,
one of the things I talk about in the book is
Not receiving lines before I lost Lucy, I thought
receiving lines were the most barbaric thing.
I mean, what could I possibly do in this poor
family? And there's all these people coming through.
But when I went through it, I actually found
it to be cathartic, very, actually I felt more
energized because here were all these people
who knew Lucy. And the receiving line serves
this dual purpose of both sides getting their
their loss acknowledged. And that was really
powerful. Yeah. So I just want to say talk a
little bit and then close when people go through
like you were describing any type of loss. What
happens is that it's a loss, right? You lose
something. Yes. So now the person might be like,
that's not part of my life anymore. So now the
person has to make a different life or go on
without that person or that thing or whatever
it is. Now, the thing with that is, to me, that's
just a matter of conforming to that new life,
to that new behavior. And that has a lot to do
with acceptance. So now I am accepting that This
person or thing is no longer here. And now I
have to have a new life. And this is just how
it is. This is the way that my life is going
to be. And now I'm going on a completely different
direction. So because that person's not here,
my life would have been different if that person
was here. So that kind of closed a chapter in
my life and to make another new chapter. Now
I'm not saying it's good. I'm very sorry for
your loss. I'm not trying to justify anything.
No, no, I'm just saying people this happens whether
it's a death or Somebody just leaves like you
lose contact with a friend or something like
that There's all different types of losses and
what happens is if I am able to embrace that
and I know sometimes it's hard but because I
have to go through that process to write the
grieving process if I'm able to embrace that
and I'm able to say Now I can do something good
with my life. I can do something different. And
this is just how it was meant to be. It's an
unfortunate situation, but that might take me,
like you were talking about writing the book,
that might take me into another part of my life
that's really, really, really gonna benefit me.
And also, I don't believe that people really
die, but that's probably another podcast for
another day, because... Yeah, I could always
keep keep in contact with with people whether
they're dead or alive, but that's just my own
thing. Absolutely. I mean, part of it is that
acceptance that this change has happened and
that again, you don't have to like it, but you
do actually have to accept it. And yeah, I'm
a firm believer that that through the loss of
Lucy, it set me on on the path that I'm on, where
I'm a thought leader on Sibling loss, I'm out
there talking about the importance of sibling
loss and the number of people that are as I said,
walking around who have lost a sibling and feel
very alone. I hear that all the time. I know
I feel that where I'm like, I, I know the siblings
survive what we're everywhere and yet we're nowhere
because as I said, there there's not a. some
way to, to, to walk around and advertise and
not that you want to advertise, but sort of say,
I am a sibling survivor. And as I'm walking down
the street, I bump into you, Debbie, and you
go, Oh, Hey, we share something, whatever it
is. Well, there's support groups. There are other,
there are a lot of things that we can do to get
an acceptance and an understanding. of what's
going on and allow us to help. But that's again,
that's another podcast. But these are some things.
So so we have we have to close. So if you want
to say for another 30 seconds or so, if you want
to say something, you can. You're not, you know,
passion, friends says you need not walk alone.
There is there is support out there. If you've
lost a sibling, compassionate friends dot org.
Really, I know it's not supposed to advertise,
but it's such an important resource. for parents
and, but especially siblings, the, the people
who, who discover us are like, Oh my gosh, saved
my life. And that's part of my mission is just
to, I really want to be able to help other sibling
survivors. It's part of Lucy's legacy. Yeah,
so that's what I just really wanted to say as
two sentences in closing is that it that this
in itself is a very big process and the fastest
and the most productive way that I can to accept
the loss and understand that this is taking me
to a very, very, very good place. I'm constantly
staying in the positive and I'm constantly moving
forward. because I can easily sit in the negative
for me for the rest of my life. So this is absolutely.
Yeah. So as we close this conversation is a reminder
that progress really comes from one big decision,
but from the internal choices we repeat. If something
from today's discussion connected with you, take
a moment to notice how those internal choices
show up in your own life. This has been the internal
shift show. Thank you for listening. And thank
you, Xander, for being on the show. I really
appreciate it. Thank you.