Family Constellations for GRIEF

Honoring what was lost — without losing yourself

Grief is one of the most human experiences we know — and one of the least understood.

We are rarely taught how to grieve in a way that allows life to continue moving.
As a result, many people either avoid grief altogether — or become frozen inside it.
Healthy grief moves.
Unintegrated grief gets stuck.

Both are forms of love — but only one allows you to live.

When grief has no place to go

Many people come to this work feeling confused by their grief.

They may say:

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“It’s been years, and I still feel paralyzed.”

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“I feel guilty when I laugh or want more from life.”

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“I don’t recognize myself anymore.”

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“If I let go of the pain, it feels like I’m betraying them."

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“I miss how I felt when I was with them — seen, special, alive."

Grief can become overwhelming when it loses its natural rhythm.
Instead of moving through us, it begins to define us.

Often, what we are missing is not only the person —
but the parts of ourselves that came alive in their presence.

When grief becomes entangled

Sometimes grief stays stuck because it is holding more than loss.

This can happen when:

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identity was deeply merged with the other person

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emotional regulation depended on the relationship

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love became fused with safety or self-worth

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separation feels like annihilation rather than loss

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anxiety or fear around future pregnancies

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a feeling of being incomplete or fragmented

In these cases, grief may be pointing toward unfinished inner work — not weakness.

What looks like “being unable to move on” may actually be:

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longing for connection with one’s own vitality

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fear of standing fully in one’s own life

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loyalty to a bond that feels too sacred to loosen

Grief does not ask us to forget.
It asks us to reorganize love.

How I support the grieving process

This work does not rush grief — and it does not glorify suffering.

Together, we gently explore:

  • what belongs to grief — and what does not
  • where love has become fused with self-abandonment
  • how to honor the bond without disappearing into it
  • how to reconnect with parts of yourself that went quiet

As grief finds its rightful place, many people experience:

  • a softening of paralysis
  • relief from guilt or shame around pleasure and desire
  • renewed access to creativity, movement, and meaning
  • permission to live — without betrayal

Grief is allowed to remain — but it no longer runs the system.

Love that continues — differently

There are moments of loss that mark us forever.
They do not need to be erased to be integrated.

When grief is supported with care, something profound becomes possible:
love continues — not as pain, but as inner permission to live fully.

Life can expand again.
Joy does not cancel love.
And devotion does not require disappearance.

Ready to Begin?