
Why Grief Doesnโt End (And What That Actually Means)
The Part That Doesnโt Stay Gone
Youโre fine for a while. Sometimes, for years.
You hadnโt thought about the thing at all. Or, if you have, youโve viewed it with the wisdom only time can serve.
You thought you were โover itโ – Time heals all woundsโฆright?
Then it sneaks up and kicks your knees outโฆ
The Way Grief Really Moves
Grief isnโt linear – itโs cyclical.
You never really โget over itโ.
It comes in waves throughout your life.
It doesnโt always make sense, but sometimes it does…
Times of stress can set your mind into a whirlwind.
Even if you can rationally understand whatโs going on, often it just doesnโt make sense emotionally.
It never seems to fully end.
Maybe the problem isnโt that you havenโt resolved itโฆ
maybe grief isnโt something that fully resolves.
Youโre Grieving More Than You Realize
I took a class called โLoss, Grief, & Copingโ a million years ago because I wanted to evaluate my own process after my mom passed away – I wanted to know if I โgrieved appropriatelyโ with as little support as I had.
I learned a lot.
One major realization was that grief doesnโt come just from someone you love dyingโฆ
It comes from a sense of loss in general.
That can mean losing a job or a home, a relationship or even a friendship ending, people walking out of your life without closure, losing versions of yourself, or even missed opportunities.
Lately Iโm realizing I can even grieve things that never got the chance to happen.
And it sucks just as much.
When It Doesnโt Fade
Sometimes that loss, and the grief that follows, can create trauma.
Though, of course, sometimes trauma can create grief.
Trauma is, simply put, an event that overwhelmed you when it happened.
For me, itโs been caused by sudden loss, abandonment, & emotional intensity with no closure.
It created a sense of loss in itself – of safety, or innocence, or stability.
It creates internal shifts, not just haunting memoriesโฆ
Where This Hit Me
The past year or so, Iโve been dealing with a lot of things from my past jumping out of the closets Iโd stuffed them in.
It started when I was randomly reminded of an old friendโฆ and somehow that turned into memories of when my mom died.
And then it just didnโt stop.
It just kept going – pulling up other losses, other moments, other people.
Things I hadnโt thought about in years.
And somewhere in the middle of that, this thought started to settle in:
everyone leaves me.
Not always in the same way.
Not always all at once.
But eventuallyโฆ theyโre gone.
And most of the time, thereโs no real resolution.
I remember thinking โWhat the fuck is going on – Why is all of this coming on right now?!?โ
And the only answer I could land on was this:
I was still grieving.
Not just one thing.
A lot of things.
And the weirdest part isโฆ it doesnโt feel like it has much to do with now.
It feels older than that.
Like Iโm not just reacting to whatโs in front of meโฆ
Iโm reacting to everything that never got finished.
Like Iโm trying to comfort past versions of myself that never really got the closure I needed.
Butโฆwhy now?!?
Thereโs a Reason It Keeps Returning
For me, it was spurred by stress.
And our brains tend to follow pathways they’ve learned naturally in the past, for the sake of preparing for or avoiding shitty situations.
Itโs not weakness, or regression, or failure.
Itโs a survival mechanism.
A painful one, butโฆ
The Truth We Avoid
Some things donโt get tied up neatly.
Thereโs no perfect closure. No clean ending. No moment where you can say, โok, moving on now.โ
And thatโs a bitch to accept.
Because weโre taught that healing means resolution.
That if you do the work, feel your feelings, give it enough timeโฆ eventually it will stop hurting.
But a lot of things donโt work like that.
Some things stay.
Not as sharp. Not as constant.
But still there.
You donโt get over it.
You learn to live with it.
And not just once – but over and over again, in different ways, at different stages of your life.
It doesnโt necessarily get easier, but it does change.
It evolves with you.
And somewhere in that process, it starts to shape you.
The way you see people.
The way you love.
The way you hold onto things that matter.
Maybe even the way you create.
Not because it was โworth it.โ Not because it needed to happen.
But because it became part of you.
And you learned how to carry it differently.
Some things donโt leave you empty.
They leave something behind.
Not closure, but pieces of what mattered.
And sometimes, thatโs what you carry forward.
So maybe healing isnโt about finishing it at all.
Maybe the healing never quite ends.
And Then Thereโs Thisโฆ
What about when nothing is actively wrong, and the past is quietly relaxing in the background, butโฆsomething still feels off.
When you’re still feeling restless, on edge, or emptyโฆ
we’ll get to that next week. ๐
Itโs not random. And itโs not just you.
Thereโs a reason it still lives in you.
If this hit something you donโt usually talk aboutโฆ share it with someone who might need it too.
Or just sit with it for a while.
Either way, youโre not the only one carrying this.
Stay real. Stay loud. And rock the fuck on. ๐๐ค๐ป

