I don’t get it. Help me understand.
People feel the loss of others they look up to, role models and high achievers (dare I say heroes) whose accomplishments or persona are particularly inspiring to them. They can seem larger than life. I submit (the now late) Kobe Bryant was among this level of luminaries. It’s part and parcel of being a fan. It isn’t necessary for a fan to actually meet the celeb to feel a connection to them.
The most sincere fans become familiar with the careers, the ebb and flow of the lives of celebrities they admire, over numbers of years, cheer them on, perhaps even living vicariously through them. They are icons who become part of the fabric of their lives; sometimes even to a point of unhealthy obsession. The demise of such a deeply respected individual can be a relatively personal affair.
In confiding your difficulty with this type of empathy, it must be said that effectively describing the aspects of empathy -in print- to one so challenged, is akin to conveying a Mozart concerto in print to the hearing impaired.
But I gave it a shot. Hope that helps.
I think such matters as emotion are comfortably outside of the rational. We like what we like, and that’s ok. Just as it follows that we feel shock and sadness when who or what we like or admire is suddenly taken away. But as a fan, I would say our personal distance from the individual mitigates the scale of our grief, though loss is understood.
One is not truly gone if they are well remembered.