“…During the reappraisal and decision-making process, they may assess their available coping resources (i.e., disengagement from the issue, venting to others, expressing emotions, or participating in a protest), and start to engage in various behaviors to help resolve their sense of racial stress. In line with this, studies find that Black parents often have conversations with family members, friends, or their children in which they recount personal experiences of racial discrimination (Dunbar et al, 2022;Saleem et al, 2020), communicate fears for their safety (Kincade & Fox, 2022;Mehra et al, 2022), and offer information about coping-related strategies (Leath et al, 2021;Threlfall, 2018). Overall, we use this theory to explore the nature of Black mothers' responses to vicarious racial violence, with a particular focus on racial grief as an understudied, but critical component of the racial stress and coping process.…”