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On Monday he spoke in deeply personal terms about the family tragedies he has endured in an emotional reflection following two mass shootings in the US that have left at least 31 dead."
There will come a time when you think of the person you lost, and it takes a long while, where you get a smile before you get a tear," Biden told CNN's Anderson Cooper on "Anderson Cooper 360."
"And that's when you know you're going to make it. And so many people have gone through what I've been through without the help I had."
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Biden's first wife and infant daughter were killed in 1972 in a car crash, and in 2015, his son Beau died from brain cancer.
A visibly emotional Biden shared how he navigated his personal darkness after each tragedy and encouraged the family members of the victims of two mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, this weekend to "find a purpose" when they feel ready.
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"I just remember being so angry -- angry at everything and, I shouldn't say it but, angry at God, just angry," he said. "And I remember and people would come up to me and say -- meaning well -- 'I understand' -- and you feel like saying, 'You have no idea, you have no idea.' "
Biden also said that the current administration misses the "uniqueness of America," and called on the families of victims to stay engaged "for those family members you have left."
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