A CBS News 60 Minutes report highlights how some parents of children killed in school shootings choose to document the empty bedrooms their children leave behind. The segment describes bedrooms as a lingering, personal reminder of what has been lost and presents accounts from multiple parents who share details and images from inside these rooms. The interviews focus on the emotional impact of returning to a space that remains unchanged while daily life shifts permanently. Parents discuss how they cope with the absence of their children and how the act of photographing or memorializing the bedrooms becomes part of their grieving process. The report portrays the rooms not as a public spectacle, but as private, family spaces that take on new meaning after a shooting. It also underscores that for bereaved families, the aftermath extends beyond memorials and investigations, reaching into the routines and physical environments of the home. Across the accounts, the shared theme is that the bedrooms continue to carry memories while also emphasizing the ongoing reality of the children’s absence.