How People Rebuild After Grief
- Katherine Mackenzie

- Mar 27
- 3 min read
Loss has a way of changing the emotional landscape of everyday life. Its true impact often unfolds over time, affecting relationships, daily functioning and one’s sense of stability, identity, and connection to the world around them.
It can appear in unexpected ways, whether you are grieving the death of a loved one, the loss of a relationship, a former identity, career, future, or changes in physical health and functioning.
Rather than trying to “move on” from the pain, therapy focuses on honouring what was lost while also building the capacity to engage with the present, helping you gradually rebuild meaning, stability, and connection in your life.
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Key Concepts:
1. Life Alongside Grief: The dual process model focuses on moving back and forth between two ways of coping. One involves facing the grief, sadness, and longing that come with loss. The other involves focusing on daily life, responsibilities, and new roles. Moving between these two helps people gradually manage both their grief and the demands of everyday life.
2. Enduring Connection: The Continuing Bonds theory challenges the idea that detachment is the goal of mourning. Instead, it views maintaining an ongoing internal connection, through rituals, memories, and shared values, as a healthy and vital part of bereavement. It allows for the evolution of the relationship rather than its termination.
3. The Expanding Life: Dr. Lois Tonkin’s model (growing around grief) suggests that grief remains a constant size throughout your life. Growth happens because you grow larger around it. As your life, experiences, and capacity for joy expand, the grief eventually occupies a smaller percentage of your total world.
4. Understanding Our Responses to Loss: After a loss, people may experience a range of emotional responses such as denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. These are not stages to complete, but common reactions that can show up, shift, and return as someone adapts to what has happened.
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Process of Navigating Grief
1. Putting Your Experience Into Words: Finding language for what you’ve lived through, especially when it feels overwhelming or hard to explain, is an important part of processing loss. This is less about finding solutions and more about putting thoughts, feelings, and experiences into words so they can be understood and gradually integrated.
2. Self-Attunement: Building the capacity to stay present with a range of emotions and to meet yourself and your experience with less judgment. This can also include experiencing moments of relief, connection, or joy alongside grief and sadness.
3. Rebuilding Your Identity: Grieving includes the loss of former roles, relationships, or versions of yourself that once provided structure and meaning. such as shifts in life stage, caregiving roles, or work identity, while also making space for who you are now.
4. Holding Space for Difficult Anniversaries: Recognizing significant dates, milestones, and reminders of loss can bring up waves of grief, even long after the loss has occurred. Rather than pushing these moments away, therapy aims to make space to remember, reflect, and stay connected in a way that feels steady and supportive.
5. Resuming Rhythms: Gradually re-engaging with daily life in a way that is realistic and sustainable, including routines, responsibilities, and sources of support, while still allowing space for grief to be present without forcing it to resolve on a timeline.
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Takeaway: Grief does have a set timeline or ending, and it does not simply go away. It changes over time, sometimes softening and sometimes coming back in ways that feel just as strong as before.
Therapy offers space to honour what has been lost and stay connected to the present so you can slowly find your way back into life.
Action Step: Take some time to check in on your life right now and see if you can identify a few Loss-oriented themes (things like feelings, memories & triggers) and a few Restoration-oriented themes (things like daily routines, responsibilities & social connection). Make space for what comes up, and take small steps toward anything you feel ready to engage with.

