The Children We Don’t See: Collective Grief and Hidden Exploitation
This article follows on from my recent piece, Grief After 60. There, I explored how personal loss, whether through death, health changes, or unexpected turns in life, shapes us in later years. But grief doesn’t always come only from within our homes or families. Sometimes it rises when we witness suffering in the wider world. This is what I call collective grief, the sorrow we feel for children and women who remain hidden in cycles of exploitation.
Why Collective Grief Matters After 60
By the time we reach our 60s, we have known loss in many forms. That makes us especially attuned to the pain of others. When we hear about children trafficked into labor, women exploited in brothels, or families torn apart by poverty and migration, something in us aches. We recognize the human cost. We know what safety and dignity mean because we’ve built lives around them, and we can imagine the despair when those are stripped away.

Grief after 60 becomes not only personal, but global and collective.
Why Exploitation Thrives
Exploitation does not appear out of thin air. It grows where social, political, and economic cracks already exist.
- Poverty: Families living on less than $2 a day are vulnerable. Traffickers often prey on parents desperate to feed their children.
- Conflict and Instability: War zones and refugee crises create fertile ground for exploitation. Displaced people become easy targets.
- Gender Inequality: In many societies, girls are valued less than boys. That inequality leaves them more vulnerable to forced marriages, sex trafficking, and child labor.
- Weak Laws and Corruption: Where justice systems are fragile, or officials look the other way, traffickers thrive.
How the Problem Looks Around the World

While exploitation is global, it takes different shapes depending on where you look.
In the United States and Europe, trafficking often hides in plain sight. Victims may be domestic workers, farm laborers, or young women promised “modeling jobs” that turn into nightmares. The U.S. State Department estimates that hundreds of thousands of people are trafficked annually in the U.S. alone. Europe sees similar numbers, especially among migrants from Eastern Europe and Africa.
In Latin America, economic inequality drives much of the exploitation. In countries like Ecuador, Colombia, and Brazil, children are recruited into forced labor or trafficked across borders. Tourism, both legitimate and illicit, adds another layer of risk.
In Asia, with its dense populations and vast informal economies, some of the highest numbers of exploited children and women are found. The International Labour Organization estimates over 11 million people in forced labor across Asia and the Pacific.
In Africa, exploitation is often tied to conflict, poverty, and displacement. Child soldiers, forced labor in mines, and trafficking of young girls for domestic work remain heartbreaking realities.
While the settings differ, the common threads are always vulnerability and invisibility.
Numbers That Stir the Heart
Sometimes statistics help us feel the scale of what words cannot capture.
- The United Nations reports that over 50 million people worldwide are living in modern slavery, a figure that includes forced labor and forced marriages.
- One in every three victims of trafficking is a child.
- Women and girls make up nearly three-quarters of all victims.
Behind each number is a face we may never see, but their absence presses against our collective conscience.
What We Can Do After 60
It is easy to feel powerless in the face of such enormity. But grief can be a catalyst. Here are ways we can make a difference.
- Start Conversations: Simply naming the issue keeps it visible. Talking about exploitation with friends, in community groups, or at book clubs gives it oxygen.
- Support Organizations: From local shelters to global nonprofits, survivor support depends on people who give time, money, or advocacy.
- Educate Ourselves: Reading survivor stories or attending talks helps us move beyond headlines. Awareness is the first defense against silence.
- Vote with Values: Policies and leaders that protect women and children deserve our support. Social and political action matters, even in later life.
From Collective Grief to Hope

Yes, the children we don’t see are hidden. Yes, their grief feels overwhelming. But acknowledging it is the first step toward healing. Our collective grief can be turned into collective strength.
At 60 and beyond, we are not bystanders. We are witnesses, advocates, and caretakers of empathy. By refusing to look away, by raising our voices and joining our hands, we honor those whose pain is often unseen. And in that act, we also find healing for ourselves.
Let’s Have a Conversation:
How do you take part in collective grief? What stories touch your heart the most?
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