Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was never the same after the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
“She could not stop thinking about it.
She had nightmares during the day,” author Paul Brandus informedCloser.

“The term PTSD did not exist back then, but clearly she was traumatized.”
“She was a good mother.
She did look forward to raising those children,” Baldridge revealed toThe Washington Post.

Jackie’s role as a mother was one of her top priorities.
“Her love for her children gave her strength,” Brandus told Closer.
Even though she was going to be First Lady, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis emphasized her role as a mother.

Since she knew childhood goes by quickly, Jackie spent plenty of time with her kids.
“She was very involved.”
“If the kids fell down, they got up.
You didn’t help them.
The then-First Lady also endeavored to keep her children out of the media.
After JFK, Jr. was christened, no more pictures of him appeared for a year.
As she had done throughout their lives, Jackie also tried to keep her kids out of the spotlight.
After they left the White House and moved to a home nearby, gathering crowds became a problem.
So, Jackie relocated to New York in 1964.
In 1971,Jackie secretly visited the White Housewith her children so they could reconnect with their past.