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Nobody can erase the pain of heartbreak or loss, but true support from a partner can help a grieving person feel safe.
When someone we care about loses a loved one, it’s natural to want to ease their pain—but many of us feel unsure of what to say or how to help. Grief is deeply personal, often unpredictable, and ...
Kendell Suljic wrote a powerful children’s book to help families who have suffered from miscarriage. Kendall’s children’s ...
Here, experts share compassionate, practical ways to support someone who's grieving or going through a rough patch. Hint: it all starts with being yourself and opening your big heart.
This, she says, was the key to finding peace again. Even the five stages of grief, the seminal research pioneered by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, wasn’t designed to help the bereaved, says Soos.
“Especially for children, grief can be very debilitating and very difficult to discuss when children don’t know the appropriate means to communicate with adults about how they’re feeling or ...
So, to help us all be better support systems in the future, we spoke to grief experts to get a better idea of phrases to avoid when offering condolences, how they're hurtful and the best ways to ...
Talking to children about death is one of the hardest conversations a parent, caregiver, or teacher may ever face. Whether it’s the passing of a grandparent, a beloved pet, or someone closer ...
Even creating an altar at your home in someone's memory is a grief ritual that can help to cope and process the loss of someone dear.
How to talk to someone who is grieving: a mother who lost her son explains - Katja Faber’s son Alex Morgan was killed a decade ago. She talks about despair, heartbreak, acceptance, and how she ...
Physically, grief floods the body with stress hormones, leading to insomnia, fatigue, aches, heaviness and chest tightness. After losing someone close, studies suggest a brief increase in mortality ...