Dear Grief Friend,
Today, we have two important items to share. First, we're sharing a new article on the finality of death and why it’s so darn hard to accept. We’ve decided to share new articles in full because, well, we want people to read them! But please remember that if you’d like to comment on the article (please do!) or share the link with a friend or family member who might find it helpful (please do x 2!), you have to hop over to the website.
Second, we’re asking for your input about grief support on social media. If you don’t use social media for grief support, feel free to simply select “No” on the first poll. If you do use social media for grief support, we’d greatly appreciate it if you would provide a little more context through a brief, anonymous survey.
Finally, we'll share the next free community webinar on coping with 'Grief Brain.'
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The finality of death is one of the harshest and most severe realities one must come to terms with after someone has died. Unlike so many of the questions and ambiguities grieving people face, the truth that the person will not return is black-and-white - yet it feels unbelievable.
Regardless of how the person died, their absence is a shock to the system. The way it feels to live in a world without this person is difficult to reconcile with the life that existed before. It’s hard to grasp that they won’t be standing in the kitchen when you arrive home. They won’t need their toothbrush or their ratty old slippers ever again. You can't pick up the phone to call or text them. They won’t be sleeping next to you when you roll over in the morning.
We spend a lot of time talking about the psychological connections people continue to nurture after a loved one dies. But before you can reach that place, you must first grieve the painful loss of physical connection. You probably don’t need us to explain why these losses are so hard, but we'll share a few thoughts on it just the same.
Our brains need time to catch up.
Mary Frances O’Connor writes about this experience in her book The Grieving Brain. She explains that, in order to navigate the world, our brains create virtual maps, and that it takes time for our minds to revise these maps after someone dies. Until then, our brains will continue to expect to find the person in their usual places and spaces.
“If someone close to us dies, then, based on what we know about object-trace cells, our neurons still fire every time we expect our loved one to be in the room. And this neural trace persists until we can learn that our loved one is never going to be in our physical world again. We must update our virtual maps, creating a revised cartography of our new lives. Is it any wonder that it takes many weeks and months of grief and new experiences to learn our way around again?”
We just really miss their physical presence.
Even after our minds have had time to absorb a world without the person, there may still be many moments when we long to physically connect with someone who died. We cling to our sensory memories of them for as long as possible.
Mercifully, most people are able to form continued bonds and ongoing psychological relationships with those they grieve. However, this ongoing memory and presence can be a double-edged sword. As much comfort as one might take in a continued bond, there will inevitably be times when you long for more. O’Connor speaks in her book about the two worlds we exist in after someone we love dies.
“Grief is a heart-wrenchingly painful problem for the brain to solve, and grieving necessitates learning to live in the world with the absence of someone you love deeply, who is ingrained in your understanding of the world. This means that for the brain, your loved one is simultaneously gone and also everlasting, and you are walking through two worlds at the same time. You are navigating your life despite the fact that they have been stolen from you, a premise that makes no sense, and that is both confusing and upsetting.”
Speaking personally, my mother died over a decade ago, but there are still times when I want to physically connect with her so badly that I stubbornly dig my heels in and insist there must be a way to have her back. Most of the time, knowing this is impossible keeps me from following that line of thinking. But there are other moments when I feel incredulous—there must be a way.
Perhaps in a dream? While in a state of meditation? Maybe she’ll speak to me or send me a sign. Sadly, those things never happen for me, but oh how I wish they would.
This can't be how their story ends.
A large part of grieving is the effort to make sense of things. Things like...
What happened?
What is their story?
What is our story?
What does their death teach me about the world, myself, and other people?
When someone dies, we may wonder: Is this really how their story ends? No final scene? No full-story moment? Instead, the curtain simply came down. We all looked around, certain there must be more. Surely it cannot end this way!
For a time, we remained frozen in confused disbelief, until it slowly sinks in that no mistake has been made—there will be no second act. The story is now left with us to make sense of, to puzzle over, and to wonder: What was its meaning? What might have come next?
Joan Didion famously wrote in her memoir The Year of Magical Thinking:
“Life changes fast. Life changes in the instant. You sit down to dinner and life as you know it ends.”
This is a truth you may understand intellectually, but until you have lived it, you cannot fully grasp the disorientation it brings—the shock of realizing this is not how the story was supposed to end...and yet, it has.
Do you use social media for grief support?
Like many people, WYG has had a complicated relationship with social media over the years. When we first began in 2012, platforms like Facebook and Instagram were effective ways to share our work and connect with people.
Even though we didn’t run groups on social media, our pages often felt group-like. Those who shared and commented were usually thoughtful, real people (not bots) who offered support to one another while also navigating their own healing.
But this was a different time, and for better or worse, the online landscape has shifted dramatically. Over the years, we cut back on social media sharing for a mix of reasons—some personal, some professional.
Now, as we head into 2026, we’re evaluating whether we’re meeting grieving people where they are, and whether there is value in forging a new relationship with social media. And if there is, our next questions become: who, what, where, and why?
As we often do, we want to turn to our greatest resource (that’s you) to ask for your thoughts on grief support on social media. First question ⬇️
| Do you use social media for grief support? Social media includes things like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Tick Tock, Reddit, and other similar platforms: |
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If you answered 'YES' ➡️ you should have been redirected to a Google Form Survey. If not, we’d love for you to share your input and perspectives in this brief, anonymous survey. It includes seven questions, and you don’t have to answer them all.
Join Us for a Free Community Webinar
All are invited to register for this free webinar as a part of the What's Your Grief Community Webinar Series:
Wednesday, January 28th @ 8pm ET
Parting Words...
Thank you for reading. As always please excuse our typos - they're proof we're human and not AI. Please feel free to reach out with your questions and topic suggestions.
Your Grief Friends,
The What's Your Grief Team
Eleanor, Litsa, & Mary
Litsa Williams, MA, LCSW-C and Eleanor Haley, MS
Co-Founders
whatsyourgrief@gmail.com
www.whatsyourgrief.com
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