Grief Counseling
Grief is different for everyone.
Understanding grief
Each individual’s encounter with grief is a highly personal and exceptionally complex process, making it unique to them. First, it is a natural response to loss. Most often, grief follows death. However, grief can also follow many life changes. For example, it can follow divorce, job loss, or illness. Likewise, it can follow disability or identity shifts. Finally, it can follow moving or caregiving changes.
Over time, many people adapt. In addition, support and routine can help. However, counseling helps when grief feels stuck. Similarly, counseling helps when daily life becomes harder. This can happen for months or longer. In some cases, people meet criteria for Prolonged Grief Disorder. In other cases, grief mixes with trauma, anxiety, or depression. Meanwhile, some carry heavy caregiving burden. Additionally, some face complex family stress.
Some common components of grief include
- Emotional: Sadness, anger, guilt, anxiety, despair, relief.
- Physical: Fatigue, appetite changes, sleep disruption, body aches.

- Cognitive: Low focus, confusion, disbelief, intrusive thoughts, “if only” thoughts.
- Behavioral: Withdrawal, restlessness, crying, avoiding reminders, routine changes.
- Spiritual / Existential: Faith questions, meaning search, disconnection, values shifts.
Your pace matters
Importantly, there is no single right way to grieve. Instead, many factors shape your experience. For instance, the relationship matters. Likewise, the way the loss happened matters. In addition, your history matters. Also, culture and support matter. Finally, stress load matters too. As a result, grief often comes in waves. Even so, healing can still happen.
Grief counseling can reduce suffering. At the same time, it can build coping skills. In addition, it can support meaning-making. Moreover, it can honor continuing bonds. Therefore, those bonds can remain healthy and present.
Types of therapy
Most impactful approaches
Research supports targeted grief care. Therefore, it works best for higher-risk people. In addition, it helps when symptoms impair functioning. Generally, structure tends to matter. Likewise, skills tend to matter. Finally, timing also matters.
Best fit: Grief stays intense and impairing. Meanwhile, time keeps passing. Yet daily life still feels hard.
Focus: Reduce avoidance. Then shift painful grief beliefs. Next rebuild routines and roles.
Why it helps: Benefits are strongest for higher symptom severity. Therefore, targeted care matters.
Evidence examples: Avis et al., 2025; Smith et al., 2025; Yaffe & Levkovich, 2025
Best fit: You feel torn. For example, you want relief. However, you also want connection.
Focus: Practice healthy oscillation. Then move between loss and restoration. Finally, build both muscles.
Why it helps: It reduces shame. As a result, it supports steady re-entry into life.
Evidence examples: Pihkala, 2025; Jin et al., 2025
Best fit: Grief meets real-world strain. For instance, caregiving grows. Meanwhile, finances tighten. Then roles change.
Focus: Stabilize routines. Next reduce decision fatigue. Also address practical stressors alongside grief.
Why it helps: Practical support can buffer distress. Therefore, it improves follow-through over time.
Evidence examples: Ribera-Asensi et al., 2025; Vanderboom et al., 2025; Schwalbach et al., 2025
What tends to help less
Support matters. Even so, structure improves outcomes. Likewise, timing influences results. As a result, some approaches show weaker effects. These patterns appear across recent reviews.
- Universal counseling for everyone: Many people adapt naturally. Therefore, targeted care helps most.
- Support without skills: Empathy helps. However, skills and goals drive change for PGD.
- Late crisis-only care: Waiting can miss key windows. Instead, earlier support can reduce risk.
- Ignoring practical burdens: Stressors maintain distress. Thus, practical supports reduce load.
- One-size-fits-all models: Grief differs by age and role. Consequently, tailoring improves fit.
When to seek support
Grief is normal. Still, some signs suggest extra support. Typically, these signs involve impairment or risk. In addition, they may involve safety concerns.
- Grief stays intense and disrupts daily functioning.
- You struggle to accept the loss over time.
- You feel numb, empty, or detached most days.
- You have suicidal thoughts or self-harm urges.
- You develop significant anxiety, depression, or trauma symptoms.
- You use substances to cope or feel out of control.
- You cannot reconnect with meaning, roles, or relationships.
Hope and next steps
Therapy offers a safe space. As you talk, you build coping skills. In addition, you learn practical supports. Over time, you can find meaning and connection. Grief is a journey. Therefore, it can include waves of pain. However, it can also include moments of peace. Most importantly, you do not have to do it alone.

Book Your Session today.
Reflect. Grow. Thrive.
To learn more about the providers working within this area of focus, click on the names below:
Dr. Katie Card Adrienne Halanick
