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The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Being here
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Continuing Bonds
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Early Grief Survival Guide: The fi...
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Finding hope in the darkest of places
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Forgotten Mourners - Sibling Grief
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Getting good (better) at feeling bad
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Griefbursts and silent screams
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Have you Ever Wondered? All about ...
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Healing Milestones After The Death...
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | My Grief Journey So Far
Being here on this island with the sun shining and waves lapping at the sandy beach forces me to think. I look out to the sea, the view framed by rugged sandstone rocks eroded by time and tide. People - families, bobbing about in the water, face
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Continuing Bonds
I am relieved that ‘letting go’, ‘finding closure’ or ‘getting over’ your loss is no longer an expectation in the way that it once was. Bear this in mind if anyone (friend, acquaintance or
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Early Grief Survival Guide: The fi...
"In the very early days of grief, my children and I searched the internet for advice. How do we do this grief thing? What will we feel? How long will it last? Some resources were better than others, but few stood out".
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Finding hope in the darkest of places
Years ago, as a newly qualified CBT therapist in the NHS, I was allocated a patient whose notes filled me with dread and anxiety. Two years previously, this patient had lost her son to suicide. I wondered what I could possibly offer this poor woman
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Forgotten Mourners - Sibling Grief
Bereaved siblings have often been called the forgotten mourners, because in the aftermath of a terrible loss they are often the ones whose grief is overlooked. But the sibling relationship is profound, it’s part of how we are formed and who we
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Getting good (better) at feeling bad
If you have recently lost your darling precious child - this is for you…I’ve written a blog for newly bereaved parents because I was that mum not so long ago. I’ve tried to write what I needed to read because it helps to know how
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Griefbursts and silent screams
Grief can leave us feeling wretched. There is an acute pain when someone you love dies, a pain that can be felt physically on occasion. On the long journey of adjustment – becoming accustomed to living life without the presence of this
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Have you Ever Wondered? All about ...
“Once you have begun to emerge from the darkness of loss, once you have begun to unfurl, blinking in the light, like someone waking from a long sleep, you rarely go back to the black pit of despair where you started".
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | Healing Milestones After The Death...
The death of a child is so profound, it’s like no other form of loss. There’s no such thing as getting over the death of a child. Instead, bereaved parents must learn to adapt to a life without our child. We must reconcile the reality
The Compassionate Friends | Guest blogs | My Grief Journey So Far
This 'Christmas Tree' is an analogy of the way grief ebbs and flows. Starting at the bottom of the image, and moving up towards the tip of the tree. Those periods of raw, agonising pain, so protracted for many months, gradually become a
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