Parents and kids navigate talks of loss and tragedy as they return home
after LA area fires
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[February 22, 2025]
By JAIMIE DING
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ceiba Phillips, 11, couldn't believe what he saw when
he returned to his Southern California neighborhood a month after a
wildfire reduced it to rubble.
The ruins of his best friend’s house and his beloved school. His house
survived, but the backhouse where his grandparents lived and packed him
lunch every morning was reduced to ashes and a silver pool of melted
aluminum. His favorite cozy diner, Fox's, was decimated.
Seeing it in person — after seeing it through photos — brought shock and
tears.
“There’s not even a word created for it,” Ceiba said. “It's sad, it's
heavy, somewhat angry. Why did this have to happen?”
The Eaton fire that tore through Altadena on Jan. 7 left parents and
children alike to deal with the trauma of one of the most destructive
fires in California history. As people return to their neighborhoods,
many kids are navigating the grief of losing everything that was
familiar. Their parents, meanwhile, are learning how to help them cope.
Children thrive on routine, and reestablishing one as quickly as
possible is key to helping kids cope, said Lori Peek, a sociology
professor at the University of Colorado Boulder who studies the impact
of natural disasters. It’s essential for kids to stay connected with
their friends, and for parents to have honest conversations with them
about the difficulty of what they are facing.

“Being honest about our own emotions and opening up, but then being very
inviting for children to share what they’re feeling, what they’re
grieving, what they’re experiencing, that can be one way to start those
really important conversations,” Peek said.
It's this kind of space that Chiara Angelicola, who works in early
childhood education, was trying to create when she organized a Kids Town
Hall event for families affected by the fires. Children had the
opportunity to share how they felt and participate in art and somatic
therapy exercises, which focus on how trauma can affect the body.
Ceiba's 4-year-old sister, Quoia, went with their mother, Alyson
Granaderos, along with more than 100 other kids and parents.
“A lot of these kids had a lot to say ... and some of it even made the
adults uncomfortable,” Angelicola said. “I think that exercise in
learning how to be uncomfortable experiencing certain feelings is very
necessary for children because we’re modeling for them that feelings
won’t hurt us.”
Hundreds of therapists and non-profits also have offered their mental
health services for free to victims of the fires.
A last normal day
Ceiba's home was one of about six on his street that wasn't destroyed,
but it sustained so much smoke damage it's not livable right now. On a
recent day, the family carefully entered wearing respirator masks and
protective equipment.
Ceiba looked out his bedroom window and said he didn't care that his
house had survived. “I'd rather have all of Altadena,” he said.
Ceiba remembers every detail of his last normal day.
School let out early due to intense Santa Ana winds that fueled the
fires. He and his sister went to Ceiba’s best friend’s house. They
played on a trampoline, drew comics, and chucked LEGO figurines off the
balcony.
“I’ve probably been to his house more than 2,000 times,” Ceiba said.

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Eaton Fire evacuees Ceiba Phillips, 11, right, adjusts his mask as
he and his mother, Alyson Granaderos, stand next to what remains of
their in-law suite during Ceiba's first visit to their home since
the fire in Altadena, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae
C. Hong)

That evening, the family received a text message from Ceiba’s
grandma asking if they saw the fire that had broken out nearby. They
ran to their window and saw the whole mountainside ablaze.
“I was on the floor like praying, please protect my house and my
family. And you know, mom’s like, ‘Come on, you got to get up, pack
your stuff,’” Ceiba said.
The 11-year-old sprang into action, dumping his clothes and quarters
into his bag and packing for his younger sister.
They sheltered in their dad’s office in neighboring Pasadena. Ceiba
could barely sleep. By the morning, much of his neighborhood was
gone.
Finding a rhythm again
Ceiba's days have taken on a rhythm again, even at his new school in
Pasadena.
When he greeted his mom on a recent afternoon, he shared a fun fact
he'd learned that day: In 1846, a future president, Abraham Lincoln,
had almost joined the ill-fated Donner Party as it set out from
Springfield, Illinois, on its infamous journey out West, only to get
trapped in California's Sierra Nevada.
Ceiba has decided to play the saxophone in band class, and his state
project will be on Michigan, where his mom is from. Granaderos said
her son already seems to be adapting.
But his conversations with friends now veer into unusual topics for
11-year-olds.
“The insurance isn’t covering us and how’s your house? How’s this
person’s house?” Ceiba said, sharing what he and his friends
discuss.
He wonders what will become of his community. He's optimistic
though.
“I know Altadena and I know that it’s going to stick together,”
Ceiba said.
Beauty, sadness and destruction
Ceiba had clamored right away to go back home after the fire, but
Granaderos was hesitant. After the dust settled, she knew that
allowing her kids to see and experience what happened was part of
the healing process.

“You’re facing this realization of certain conversations you have to
start to have with your kid, right?” Granaderos said. “There’s
beauty in the world, and there’s also a lot of sadness and
destruction.”
Quoia burst into tears when the family drove past what was left of
The Bunny Museum in Pasadena dedicated to rabbits. She loved seeing
the giant inflatable bunnies that loomed over the street corner
nearly every day. Ceiba cried along with her.
“I just couldn’t really take it,” he said.
But not all is lost.
Granaderos named both of her children after trees — Ceiba, the tree
of life, and Quoia after the Sequoia. She planted a sapling of the
iconic Sequoia — which is extraordinarily resilient to fire, insects
and disease — in the home's backyard when Quoia was a baby.
After the fire, it is still standing.
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