Being With Grief

For friends, family, and everyone else walking beside someone in loss

Adapted from Being With Grief (Jonathan Bertman, MD). Not therapy. Not a script. A map.

The one thing: Grief isn't a problem to solve. It's a process to witness. Your job isn't to fix their pain β€” it's to be present while they feel it.

Note on culture: This guide reflects common Western norms β€” individual processing, verbal support. Your community may grieve differently. Religious traditions have their own wisdom. Follow the bereaved person's lead.

What grief actually is

Grief isn't a phase to finish. It's love with nowhere to go. The brain built predictions that included this person β€” every empty chair, every phone that doesn't ring is a small shock as reality updates.

What they may be feeling

There is no timeline. Year one can be harder than week one. Both are normal.

What not to do

Most unhelpful phrases try to fix grief so everyone feels less uncomfortable.

What people sayWhat it can sound like
"They're in a better place"You should feel good about this
"Everything happens for a reason"Your pain has a purpose you should accept
"I know how you feel"Your experience isn't unique
"You need to be strong"Your feelings are a burden
"It's been X months…"You're grieving wrong
"Let me know if you need anything"Here's a task I'm unlikely to do
Nothing (avoiding them)Your grief is too much for me

Don't compare grief β€” not even your own. Don't give advice unless they ask. Don't rush a timeline.

Permission to be imperfect: Clumsy presence beats polished absence. The only real failure is abandonment.

What helps

  1. Show up β€” sit, stay, let silence be okay
  2. Say their name β€” they haven't forgotten; neither should you
  3. Listen without fixing β€” "That sounds so hard." Let them repeat themselves
  4. Specific offers β€” "Dinner Tuesday β€” lasagna okay?" not "call if you need anything"
  5. Remember the long tail β€” month 3, year 1, random Tuesdays
  6. Tolerate anger β€” "You're allowed to be angry"
  7. Witness guilt β€” "That sounds heavy to carry" (don't argue it away)
  8. Practical help β€” food, lawn, dog, paperwork β€” often without asking first
If you remember one line:
"I don't know what to say, but I'm here and I love you."

Phrases that land

Acknowledging

Permission

Remembering

Harder situations (brief)

Sudden or traumatic loss

Don't probe for details. "I can't believe it" may last months. Trauma may need professional support β€” offer to help find it.

Suicide loss

Say "suicide." Don't speculate why. Repeat: "It's not your fault" (they may not believe it yet). Extra presence β€” stigma isolates. AFSP Β· Alliance of Hope

Child loss

Never "at least you have other children." Say the child's name. Don't disappear β€” many do.

When you're grieving too

You can't pour from an empty cup. Grieving together can itself be support.

When you can't be there in person

Short, frequent texts beat rare long ones. "No need to reply β€” thinking of you." Order meals. Coordinate local help.

When to encourage more help

Most grief doesn't need therapy. Watch for red flags: suicidal statements, can't function after many months, escalating substances, complete withdrawal, self-harm, wanting to "join" the deceased.

Say: "I'm worried about you." Offer to make calls or go to a first appointment. If immediate danger β†’ 988 or ER.

This isn't pathologizing grief. It's recognizing when friends aren't enough.

For the person grieving

Send them to the Grief Workbook β€” interactive, private, no timeline. Or sum1namedHAL if they want to talk it through (not therapy).

Acute overwhelm β†’ apamphlet.com (breathe, ground, wait).

Crisis resources

This guide doesn't replace professional care. If someone is in immediate danger, call 988 or local emergency services.