What we do.
Grief can feel like an incredibly lonely journey. We provide individual, family, professional, and group-based grief support, along with workplace services, community-based groups, and organizational consultation, education, and program development to help integrate grief-informed leadership, communication, and compassionate practice.
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Grief is a universal, normal, and natural response to loss of any kind, and all people experience it at some point over the course of a lifetime—often many times.
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There are more than 40 different life events that can lead to grief—not only death, but any loss or change that disrupts your sense of stability, connection, or identity.
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Grief never truly goes away, and when it’s unaddressed or pushed aside, it doesn’t fade—it lingers, accumulates, and often intensifies, reminding us that healing requires attention, not time alone.
Our Founder
My work in grief support is rooted in my own lived experience. When I was grieving, I went from one counselor to another, hoping someone would finally see me—but instead, I felt invisible. That experience shaped everything about the way I show up for others.
I support people in grief because I know what it’s like to sit in pain without true understanding, and I know how transformative it is to finally feel seen, heard, and held with compassion.
My practice exists to offer the care I once needed—support that honors grief as a profoundly human experience, not a problem to be fixed or medicated away. Here, there is no timeline for your healing, no pressure to be “further along,” and you never have to do more emotional work than you’re ready for.
Dr. Rachael D. Nolan
What we believe.
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Grief cannot be measured, compared, or ranked. There is no scale that determines whose loss is “worse,” whose pain is deeper, or whose grief is more legitimate.
While many people accept that certain losses, such as the death of a child, are the “worst” kinds of grief, different losses touch people in different ways. The loss of a child, a parent, partner, sibling, chosen family member, or beloved pet can each carry a depth of grief that is profound and long-lasting.
Comparing grief can be deeply harmful, often leading people to doubt their pain, feel undeserving of support, or feel pressured to move on and "get over" it.
In reality, every grief experience deserves understanding, care, and compassion.
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Grief is often associated with death, but many people are surprised to learn that grief can arise from any meaningful loss, even when no one has died.
For this reason, grief is an emotional response to change, rupture, or the loss of what once was. It can follow endings, transitions, and moments when life no longer looks the way it used to.
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Grief doesn’t always look like sadness. It can appear as irritability, exhaustion, numbness, forgetfulness, overworking, restlessness, physical pain, or feeling disconnected from yourself and others.
Grief can also surface months or even years after a loss, and can be overlooked due to everyday stressors, making it difficult to recognize.
Because many forms of loss, such as identity changes, life transitions, trauma, relationship shifts, or unmet expectations, often go unacknowledged, people don’t always realize that what they’re experiencing is grief.
You may be grieving if you’ve experienced:
Divorce, separation, or the end of a relationship
Estranged or fractured family relationships
Infertility, pregnancy loss, or unmet hopes of parenthood
Chronic illness, disability, or changes in physical or mental health
A medical diagnosis (your own or a loved one’s)
Career loss, retirement, or shifts in professional identity
Relocation or loss of community
Changes in family roles or long-term dynamics
Trauma or life-altering events
Loss of safety, trust, purpose, identity, or a sense of self
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When grief is ignored, suppressed or pushed aside, it often resurfaces as anxiety, irritability, exhaustion, physical symptoms, emotional numbness, or difficulty connecting with others.
Unprocessed grief can keep people stuck, prolong suffering, and make it harder to make meaning of their loss.
By acknowledging and tending to grief, we give ourselves the chance to understand it, integrate it, and carry it in healthier, more compassionate ways.
Thus, in facing grief, and not avoiding it, we create the conditions for healing, resilience, and emotional well-being.
Common signs and symptoms of grief that are often ignored include:
Emotional exhaustion or burnout
Consistently prioritizing others’ needs before your own
Anxiety, irritability, or feeling “on edge”
Guilt or self-doubt
Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
Changes in sleep or appetite
Feeling disconnected from yourself or others
Addiction, substance misuse, and risk-taking behaviors
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Grief is overwhelming, unpredictable, and deeply human. There is no expectation that you should “hold it together” or feel okay when life has been upended.
Feeling sad, angry, numb, confused, or unlike yourself is not a sign of weakness or failure, it’s a natural response to loss.
Allowing yourself to not be okay gives your grief space to be felt, understood, and eventually softened.
Thus, healing begins when we stop judging our emotions and give ourselves permission to be exactly where we are.
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Grief is a normal and natural response to loss—not a pathology or a sign that something is wrong.
It reflects our capacity to love, connect, and care deeply, and is an essential part of the human experience rather than a condition to be cured.
While a small percentage of grievers may need clinical intervention due to trauma or complications, most people simply need community, connection, and supportive spaces where their grief can be witnessed and honored.
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Grief does not usually require medication, because it’s a natural emotional process that medicine cannot fix or speed up.
In many cases, medication can numb or suppress the very emotions the body needs to feel in order to heal and recover from loss.
However, when grief is complicated by other challenges—such as severe depression, anxiety, trauma, or difficulty functioning—prescription medication may be helpful in managing symptoms so that emotional processing can occur.
What we debunk.
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There are no stages of grief. The popular idea that people move through predictable phases—denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance—was never meant to describe how people grieve.
These “stages” came from research on individuals facing their own impending death, not from people mourning a loss. Over time, the model was misunderstood and applied where it doesn’t belong.
More importantly, grief does not follow a straight line, a checklist, or a sequence. It does not unfold neatly or in order.
Grief is a deeply personal, non-linear experience that changes from moment to moment, day to day, and year to year. People may feel anger in the morning, peace in the afternoon, and sadness by evening—all without being in a “stage.”
Trying to fit grief into stages can make people feel like they’re grieving “wrong,” or that they should be further along than they are. It can create pressure, shame, and confusion when their experience doesn’t match the model.
In reality, grief is shaped by love, personality, culture, relationships, circumstances, and the meaning of the loss—making every grief experience unique.
There is no right way to grieve, no timeline, and no sequence to follow.
Grief doesn’t happen in stages.
Grief happens in waves—each one asking to be felt, understood, and honored in its own time.
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Strength in grief is not about holding it together. It’s about allowing yourself to feel and be human.
When the expectation is to be strong, grievers can feel pressured to suppress their emotions for the sake of those around them.
The act of “being strong” often discourages authenticity, isolates the grieving person, and isn’t a good example for others.
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Time only creates distance from the moment of loss, not healing from its impact.
Grief doesn’t dissolve simply because days, months, or years pass. In fact, when pushed aside, grief can intensify over time, settling deeper into the body and mind, impacting mood, relationships, and overall well-being.
Healing requires more than waiting for time to pass - it requires attention, support, and meaning-making.
Time does not heal grief. What heals grief is what we do with our time.
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Crying is a natural and healthy response to emotional pain and grief. It is the body’s built-in way of releasing accumulated tension and emotional toxins—much like sweating during a run.
Crying can also soften what feels tight, overwhelming, or “stuck” inside, giving the nervous system a chance to reset. It our body doing exactly what it’s designed to do.
What matters is not whether we cry, but whether we feel safe enough to express our emotions in whatever form they arise.
Equally important, not crying does not mean we’re not grieving because people express grief in a variety of ways.
Grief can appear as exhaustion, restlessness, overworking, withdrawal, anger, irritability, numbness, or simply surviving.
On the other hand, the act of intentionally holding back tears suppresses the body’s natural process of release, allowing unexpressed grief to settle deeper into the body and mind.
All grief is valid—whether it pours out as tears or lives quietly beneath the surface. Both deserve understanding, compassion, and care, and neither is a sign of weakness.
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After a loss, people often hear messages like “Don’t feel bad, they wouldn’t want you to be sad,” or “They’re in a better place.”
But loss is sad, and grieving people naturally long for the loved ones they’ve lost. Encouraging avoidance or forced positivity doesn’t make grief disappear; it simply pushes it out of sight, where it can deepen, accumulate, and linger.
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Statements like “Just move on,” “Get over it,” or “You should be over this by now” are deeply harmful to grievers because they deny the real, human experience of loss.
These messages imply that grief has an expiration date, that emotions should be controlled, and that the person’s pain is inconvenient or excessive.
Instead of offering comfort, they create shame and pressure—making people feel as though something is wrong with them for still hurting.
These phrases also oversimplify something profoundly complex. Grief isn’t a switch you turn off; it’s a natural, adaptive response to love, connection, and loss.
When someone is told to “move on,” they may try to bury their emotions, appear “fine,” or detach from their own experience just to meet others’ expectations.
At its core, grief is not a problem to be solved—it’s a process to be honored. Encouraging someone to “get over it” shuts down the connection, compassion, and understanding that grieving people need most.
Likewise, expecting ourselves or others to be “over it” in a set amount of time is not just unrealistic—it’s harmful. The impact of loss isn’t measured in days or months; it’s measured in how fully it has been acknowledged, expressed, and integrated.
We don’t “get over” grief.
We learn to live with it, carry it, and weave it into the story of our lives.
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Keeping busy may help us get through the day, but it won’t help us move through our grief.
Even distractions can offer us temporary relief, but avoiding our grief doesn’t make it disappear—it simply postpones it.
When we push our grief aside, it accumulates, settles deeper into our body and mind, and becomes harder to face over time.
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Statements like “You’re still young,” “You can have another baby,” “You’ll meet someone new,” or “It’s just a pet—get a new one” are often said by people who don’t know what else to say, but they can unintentionally minimize the depth of someone’s pain.
Grief is not interchangeable. A new partner, a future child, or any other life change cannot erase the meaning of the person, companion, or relationship that is gone. Every bond carries its own memories, dreams, and emotional landscape.
Encouraging someone to “replace” what was lost can leave them feeling misunderstood, pressured, or even ashamed for still hurting.
More importantly, it denies the uniqueness of the relationship, the hopes that were attached to it, and the identity or future that was imagined with that someone—or something.
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A grieving person can feel completely alone even when surrounded by others, because grief changes their world in ways that others may not see or fully understand.
In the days and weeks after loss, support may be abundant, but as life moves on for everyone else, grievers are often left carrying the weight of loss quietly and unseen.
Additionally, many people are taught to deal with painful emotions privately or to keep their feelings to themselves. But grief is a deeply human experience that calls for connection, not isolation.
When people grieve alone, the magnitude and weight of their loss often intensifies.
What to expect.
Working with us, you can expect structure when you want it, freedom when you need it, support when you’re overwhelmed, and clarity when nothing makes sense.
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Our approach blends research-based, trauma-informed education to help you better understand what happens in grief and why.
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Our evidence-based programming provides clear, reliable guidance for those seeking direction, offering actionable steps that help you understand grief and move through it without becoming overwhelmed.
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Our approach offers collaborative support for those who feel most assured when they are cared for, connected, and not navigating grief alone—creating a space where your needs can finally come first.
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Our approach provides flexible, creative options for those who resist rigid rules and prefer to navigate grief in ways that feel authentic and adaptable.
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Our approach provides a safe, stable place to land and offers a calm, grounded, and supportive presence in the midst of carrying heavy emotional pain.
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Our approach provides personalized healing plans tailored to how you naturally respond to grief amid life’s expectations, obligations, and goals.
Contact us
For questions, pricing, or to schedule a session or consultation, please contact us. We’re here to provide information, guidance, and support tailored to your needs.
