• APPENDIX
    May 24 2025

    APPENDIX

    How to Help a Grieving Friend

    My essay on how to help a grieving friend is among the top three most

    shared posts I’ve ever written. A lot of what I’ve mentioned in part 3 is

    summarized in this essay, so I’ve reprinted it here. To give it to friends and

    family who want to help, you’ll find a printable copy at

    refugeingrief.com/help-

    grieving-friend.

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    13 Min.
  • LOVE IS THE ONLY THING THAT LASTS
    May 24 2025

    LOVE IS THE ONLY THING THAT LASTS

    How do we end a book on loss if we don’t lean back on the expected

    happy ending? If we don’t search for a tacked-on transformation, or a

    promise

    that everything will work out in the end?

    I end this book with love because love is all we’ve got. It’s neither up-note

    nor doom. It simply is.

    We grieve because we love. Grief is part of love.

    There was love in this world before your loss, there is love surrounding

    you

    now, and love will remain beside you, through all the life that is yet to

    come. The

    forms will change, but love itself will never leave. It’s not enough. And it’s

    everything.

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    9 Min.
  • THE TRIBE OF AFTER
    May 24 2025

    PART IV

    THE WAY FORWARD

    15

    THE TRIBE OF AFTER

    Companionship, True Hope, and the Way Forward

    Companionship, reflection, and connection are vital parts of surviving

    grief. As I mentioned at the beginning of this book, attachment is survival.

    We

    need each other.

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    14 Min.
  • RALLYING YOUR SUPPORT TEAM
    May 24 2025

    RALLYING YOUR SUPPORT TEAM

    Helping Them Help You

    Our friends, our families, our therapists, our books, our cultural

    responses—they’re all most useful, most loving and kind, when they help

    those

    in grief to carry their pain, and least helpful when they try to fix what isn’t

    broken.

    Most people want to help; they just don’t know how.

    There’s such a huge gap between what people want for us, and what they

    actually provide with their support. It’s no one’s fault, really. The only way

    to

    close that gap is to let people know what works, what doesn’t, and how we

    can

    all improve our skills in caring for each other.

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    13 Min.
  • SHOULD YOU EDUCATE OR IGNORE THEM?
    May 24 2025

    PART III

    WHEN FRIENDS AND FAMILY DON’T

    KNOW WHAT TO DO

    13

    SHOULD YOU EDUCATE OR IGNORE

    THEM?

    If you’re like most grieving people, the response from people around

    you has been clumsy at best, and insulting, dismissive, and rude at worst.

    We

    talked about the deep roots of pain avoidance and the culture of blame in

    earlier

    parts of this book. It’s also important to bring it all back to your personal

    life, to

    help you understand—and correct—the unhelpful support of the people

    around

    you.

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    14 Min.
  • FIND YOUR OWN IMAGE OF “RECOVERY”
    May 24 2025

    FIND YOUR OWN IMAGE OF “RECOVERY”

    Talking with people in new grief is tricky. During the first year, it’s so

    tempting to say that things get better. I mean, is it really a kindness to say,

    “Actually, year two is often far harder than year one”? But if we don’t say

    anything, people enter years two and three and four thinking they should

    be

    “better” by now. And that is patently untrue: subsequent years can actually

    be

    more difficult.

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    12 Min.
  • WHAT DOES ART HAVE TO DO WITH ANYTHING?
    May 23 2025

    WHAT DOES ART HAVE TO DO WITH

    ANYTHING?

    I want to tell you that the creative process will be healing for you, in

    and of itself. But I’m a terrible liar.

    I can’t bring up the creative process without being honest about my own

    path. The arts, or any artistic practices, were hard for me in the early days

    of

    grief. I resented words and writing for a really long time. I resented any

    creative

    process for a really long time. Even as I needed them.

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    13 Min.
  • GRIEF AND ANXIETY
    May 23 2025

    GRIEF AND ANXIETY

    Calming Your Mind When Logic Doesn’t Work

    Grief changes your body and your mind in strange ways. Cognitive

    capacity isn’t the only brain function that gets wonky. Anxiety—whether

    it’s

    new to you, or you experienced it before your loss—is a huge issue in grief.

    I used to struggle a lot with anxiety.

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    14 Min.