Coping with grief varies dramatically between individuals, manifesting through diverse physical, emotional, and mental symptoms that affect daily functioning, yet evidence-based therapeutic support from licensed clinical social workers offers personalized, compassionate strategies to process loss and develop healthy healing approaches without prescribed timelines.
Are you worried you're not grieving the "right" way? Coping with grief doesn't follow a rulebook, and the pressure to grieve "correctly" can actually hinder your healing. Your unique grief journey deserves validation, understanding, and compassionate support tailored to your individual needs.
Coping With Grief: There Is No Right Or Wrong Way
Content warning: Please be advised, the below article might mention substance use-related topics that could be triggering to the reader. If you or someone you love is struggling with substance use, contact SAMHSA’s National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357). Support is available 24/7.
Grief is a deeply personal experience that can result from many types of loss—the death of a loved one, the end of a relationship, job loss, declining health, or other significant life changes. Each person’s grief journey is unique, shaped by their individual history, relationships, cultural background, and personal coping mechanisms. Given this profound diversity in how people experience and process loss, it’s essential to understand that there is no “correct” or “normal” way to grieve.
The emotions, physical sensations, and thoughts that accompany grief can vary dramatically from person to person, even among those who have experienced similar losses. What helps one person move through their grief may not resonate with another. Some find comfort in solitude and reflection, while others need connection and conversation. Some people cry frequently; others may not cry at all. Some experience intense emotions immediately, while others feel numb for weeks or months before grief fully emerges.
Recognizing that your grief is valid—regardless of how it manifests—can be an important first step in your healing process.
Understanding the Many Faces of Grief
While grief is often associated primarily with sadness, the reality is far more complex. Grief affects people holistically, influencing physical health, emotional wellbeing, and cognitive functioning. Understanding the various ways grief can manifest may help you recognize your own experiences and feel less alone in what you’re going through.
How Grief Affects Your Body
The physical dimension of grief often surprises people. Many don’t realize that emotional pain can translate into tangible bodily symptoms. Physical manifestations of grief can include:
- Significant changes in appetite, leading to weight loss or gain
- Persistent fatigue and low energy, even after adequate rest
- Digestive disturbances, such as stomach pain, nausea, diarrhea, or constipation
- Sleep disruptions, including difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or sleeping too much
- Headaches and muscle tension
- Weakened immune function, making you more susceptible to illness
These physical symptoms represent your body’s response to emotional stress and loss. They are natural reactions, not signs of weakness or illness, though they can certainly impact your daily functioning and overall wellbeing.
The Emotional Landscape of Loss
Grief brings with it a wide spectrum of emotions, many of which can feel contradictory or confusing. The emotional experience of grief commonly includes:
- Deep sorrow and emotional pain that may come in waves
- Anger—at the situation, at the person who died, at yourself, or even at others who haven’t experienced loss
- Guilt, including thoughts about what you could have done differently
- Relief, particularly after a prolonged illness or difficult relationship
- Numbness and emotional detachment, as if you’re observing your life from a distance
- Yearning for things to return to how they were before the loss
- Loneliness and a sense of disconnection from others who haven’t experienced similar loss
- Anxiety about future losses or your ability to cope
It’s important to recognize that all of these emotions are valid expressions of grief. You may experience several simultaneously, or they may shift rapidly. There is no hierarchy of “appropriate” grief emotions—anger is not less valid than sadness, nor is relief less legitimate than sorrow.
Cognitive and Mental Impacts
Grief doesn’t only affect how you feel; it also influences how you think and process information. Cognitive symptoms of grief can include:
- Difficulty accepting the reality of the loss, with moments where it doesn’t feel real
- Intrusive thoughts about the loss or the person who died
- Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
- Memory problems, including forgetting appointments or conversations
- Preoccupation with the circumstances of the loss
- Worry and anxiety about potential future losses
- Self-blame, even when there is no rational basis for feeling responsible
These cognitive disruptions occur because grief demands significant mental and emotional resources. Your brain is working to process a major life change, which can temporarily reduce your capacity for other mental tasks.
When Grief Becomes Prolonged
For most people, the intensity of grief symptoms gradually diminishes over time, though the timeline varies considerably. There is no “normal” duration for grief—some people begin to find their footing within months, while others may take years to adjust to their new reality.
However, when grief symptoms remain severe and functionally impairing for an extended period—typically more than a year after the loss—and continue to significantly interfere with daily responsibilities and quality of life, this may indicate prolonged grief disorder, also known as complicated grief.
Prolonged grief disorder is recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-V) as a distinct mental health condition. People experiencing this form of grief often describe feeling “stuck,” as though they cannot move forward. The pain may feel as fresh and intense as it did immediately after the loss, and they may struggle to envision a meaningful future without the person or thing they’ve lost.
If you recognize these patterns in your own experience, it’s important to know that professional therapeutic support can be highly effective in addressing prolonged grief. Licensed clinical social workers who specialize in grief counseling can help you work through the barriers preventing you from processing your loss and gradually rebuilding your life.
Strategies for Moving Through Grief
While everyone’s grief journey is different, certain approaches have proven helpful for many people navigating loss. The following strategies are not prescriptions—they’re options to consider as you discover what works best for you.
Allow Yourself to Feel What You Feel
One of the most important—and often most difficult—aspects of processing grief is allowing yourself to fully experience your emotions without judgment. Many people experiencing loss feel pressure to grieve in a particular way or to “get over it” within a certain timeframe. You may find yourself thinking, “I should be doing better by now,” or “I shouldn’t feel angry—I should only feel sad.”
These self-imposed expectations can actually impede your healing process. Emotions don’t follow logical rules or social expectations. Trying to suppress or avoid painful feelings rarely makes them disappear; instead, unprocessed emotions often resurface in unexpected or unhealthy ways.
Emotional avoidance can lead to various coping mechanisms that provide temporary relief but create longer-term problems, including substance misuse, compulsive behaviors, or physical health issues. When we don’t create space for difficult emotions, they find other outlets.
Fully experiencing your emotions doesn’t mean dwelling in suffering indefinitely or allowing grief to completely overwhelm your life. Rather, it means acknowledging what you’re feeling when you’re feeling it, without trying to push it away or convince yourself you should feel differently.
Practical ways to process your emotions include:
Journaling: Writing about your feelings can help you identify and understand them more clearly. Consider keeping a dedicated grief journal where you can freely express whatever you’re experiencing without censoring yourself. You might write letters to the person you’ve lost, describe memories, or simply document your daily emotional landscape.
Naming your emotions: When you notice a feeling arising, try to identify it specifically. Instead of just “I feel bad,” try “I feel angry and guilty and exhausted.” This specificity can help emotions feel more manageable and less overwhelming.
