We’ve been told grief has an endpoint—something to get through, get over, and then move on from. But real grief doesn’t look like that. It’s not linear, it’s not tidy, and it doesn’t disappear. In this new post, I explore why the idea of a “grief timeline” is misleading, how grief changes who we are, and why creating a grief map might offer more comfort than chasing closure ever could.
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The Timeline Is a Lie: There Is No ‘After…
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We’ve been told grief has an endpoint—something to get through, get over, and then move on from. But real grief doesn’t look like that. It’s not linear, it’s not tidy, and it doesn’t disappear. In this new post, I explore why the idea of a “grief timeline” is misleading, how grief changes who we are, and why creating a grief map might offer more comfort than chasing closure ever could.