Episode

What Francesca Bridgerton and a D-Day Veteran Both Discovered About Grief I Deep Dive on Ep. 273

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Documentary First
Published
Mar 19, 2026
Duration seconds
893
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https://tinyurl.com/DocFirstPod
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https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/0c54adab-7895-45a6-8e42-842a59248f7c.mp3
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Summary

In Bridgerton Season 4, Francesca Bridgerton stands in the middle of her husband’s funeral and says something no one expects: “I want to feel joy.” Eighty years earlier and four thousand miles away, a D-Day veteran stood on Utah Beach watching children play in the water where his friends had died—and said something just as unexpected: “That’s why we came.” In this episode of Documentary First: The Deep Dive, Christian Taylor connects these two moments to a discovery C.S. Lewis made in his grief journal A Grief Observed—and asks what it all means for the stories we tell as filmmakers. The answer surprised her. It might surprise you too. What You’ll Learn: What 20+ D-Day veterans told filmmaker Jake Schroeder when he asked if it was disrespectful to play on the beaches where men died The C.S. Lewis line that connects grief, praise, and joy—and why filmmakers need to hear it How Bridgerton Season 4, Episode 7 modeled a radically different response to loss G.K. Chesterton’s 1908 concept that reframes everything: why joy might be bigger than the pain Christian’s challenge to filmmakers: What if we gave our audiences permission to dance? The Core Insight: C.S. Lewis noticed that his grief wasn’t bringing him closer to his wife—it was cutting him off from her. Only in moments of least sorrow did she come rushing back, vivid and whole. He realized there are different modes of loving someone you’ve lost: grief focuses on the absence, but praise focuses on the fullness. And when love takes the form of praise, joy shows up inside it without being forced. That’s what Francesca Bridgerton discovered at John’s celebration of life. It’s what Anthony Malin was doing when he watched children splash on Utah Beach and wept. Same love. Different mode. Plus: Christian’s personal story of l…