Grief/Loss

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur. Tempor sit tempus eu fermentum in. Pulvinar vestibulum blandit quam tempor consectetur hendrerit tincidunt. Leo montes pellentesque id cras. Auctor fringilla tincidunt amet duis dis lectus nunc viverra. Sagittis ut tempor lacus amet dolor sit condimentum dictum. Massa interdum arcu elementum tristique ac congue mollis nullam senectus. Iaculis quis est sed turpis adipiscing viverra sagittis. At eget neque massa sed diam posuere risus auctor ut. In libero proin dictum ultrices neque odio potenti proin egestas. Massa amet viverra nunc suspendisse varius fames eu. Sagittis iaculis enim gravida euismod magna arcu.

Grief doesn’t follow a clear path. It doesn’t move in tidy stages. It arrives how it arrives — with waves that can be sharp or strangely dull, sudden or slow.

Loss comes in many forms: the death of someone loved, the end of a relationship, a change in health, a life that no longer looks the way it once did. Some losses are recognised and spoken about. Others remain quiet — hard to name, or difficult for others to see.

Grief can feel isolating, even when others mean well. It can stir guilt, anger, confusion — or nothing at all. Sometimes it lingers long after it “should have passed.” Sometimes it doesn’t appear until much later.

Therapy offers a space where grief can take the shape it needs. Not to be rushed or resolved, but to be listened to — even when there are no clear words. In that space, something of the loss can begin to be lived with, rather than around.