Supporting a loved one through grief is one of the most difficult things you can do. You do not always know what to say, or how to be helpful without overstepping. Yet your presence alone already matters more than you think.
By simply trying to help and being there for the bereaved person, you are already doing the right thing.
What a grieving person is going through
Grief does not follow a simple or predictable path. It is not a linear sadness that gradually fades. It feels more like a wave that rises and falls, often without warning, sometimes triggered by everyday details like a simple meal, a song heard by chance, or a familiar smell.
Psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross identified five commonly observed reactions in grieving people: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. However, these stages do not unfold in a neat order. They overlap, loop back, and appear out of sequence. Every grief experience is unique, just like the relationship that was lost.
In practical terms, the person you are supporting may seem fine one day and completely overwhelmed the next. This is not a setback, but a natural part of the grieving process.
Grief takes forms that are not always recognized
Grief is often associated with the loss of a parent, partner, or friend. However, it can also follow the loss of a pet, a pregnancy loss, or the death of a baby who passed away too soon.
These types of grief are sometimes less socially recognized. People around the family may not know how to respond, which often leads to unintentional silence. The grieving person can then experience an immense loss in even deeper isolation.
Recognizing these losses fully, without minimizing or comparing them, is already a form of support.
Why we pull away even when we want to stay
It is common for people to distance themselves from someone who is grieving, even unintentionally. It is not a lack of care, but rather fear of doing the wrong thing, fear of worsening the pain, or worry about not finding the right words, or reopening wounds by mentioning the deceased.
However, this silence often has the opposite effect. The grieving person may feel isolated, pushed away, or as if their pain is uncomfortable for others.
Quick guide: what to say and what to do in grief situations
In the early moments of grief, your response matters a lot. What you say or do in the first hours or days can stay with someone for a long time. Here is a quick reference to guide your words and actions.
Avoid | Prefer |
|---|---|
« I know how you feel. » | « I cannot imagine what you are going through, but I am here. » |
« Time heals everything. » | « I will be here in a month, in six months, as long as you need. » |
« It was their time. » | « I remember them with a lot of love. » |
« Call me if you need anything. » | « I will come by Tuesday and bring a meal. » |
Actions that truly matter
Words comfort, actions relieve
A grieving person is exhausted. They are dealing with administrative tasks, intense emotions, and sometimes children who need support. Practical help creates mental space and shows, without needing big speeches, that you are truly there.
Offer something specific
Avoid saying “call me if you need anything.” Even if sincere, it puts the burden on the grieving person to identify a need and ask for help.
Instead, offer something concrete:
- «I will come tomorrow and bring a meal.»
- «I can take care of the children on Wednesday afternoon.»
- «I can go with you for your appointments if you want.»
All they need to answer is a simple yes or no.
Stay present over time
Support often peaks around the funeral. Then life resumes for others, while the grieving person is left alone with their grief, often during the hardest weeks and months.
A message one month later. A note on the first Mother’s Day without them or a text on the anniversary of the death can make a world of difference. These small gestures say: «I have not forgotten you. You are not alone.»
Honouring memory is a real need
Maintaining a connection with the person who died is not staying stuck in grief. It is part of the healing process.
Psychologist William Worden explained that one of the goals of grief work is to transform the bond with the deceased, not erase it. Love continues, just in a different form.
Small rituals that anchor memory
Funeral rituals play an important psychological role. They acknowledge the reality of loss and create a shared space for expression. Offering to accompany someone through these steps, whether it is choosing a funeral home, planning a memorial, or visiting a cemetery, is a meaningful gesture.
You can also suggest creating small personal rituals. Such as lighting a candle on a meaningful date, cooking a dish the person loved, or sharing a memory with children. These simple acts help maintain a symbolic presence without keeping someone stuck in pain.
Objects that carry memory
There is something deeply human in the need to keep a tangible trace of someone who has died, as a way to keep the bond from fading completely. A photo, a piece of clothing, or a memorial piece of jewelry becomes a meaningful anchor. These objects do not replace the person, but they offer a form of symbolic presence that can be touched or seen when absence feels overwhelming.
This belief is at the heart of what we do at La Joie en Rose. For years, we have supported families in their most intimate moments and have understood that some people need to keep love physically close to their heart. The jewelry we create, made from ashes, pet hair, or other meaningful elements, comes from this fundamental need: not to let go completely of what we have loved.
When grief goes beyond what loved ones can offer
You can be there. You can listen, cook meals, and send messages. But sometimes the pain is too heavy for friendship or family alone to hold.
Recognizing this limit is also a form of care.
If you notice your loved one isolating for a long time, struggling with daily life, or showing signs of deep distress, gently encourage professional support. Not because something is «wrong,» but because they deserve a space designed for what they are going through.
Resources available in Quebec
- MonDeuil.ca: a free and confidential platform to navigate grief at your own pace through modules created by specialists and people with lived experience. It is a helpful first step to put feelings into words.
- Therapist: individual grief support, in person in Montreal or online across Quebec, as well as group sessions to avoid going through grief alone. For those who need personalized and professional human support.
- Your CLSC: if you do not know where to start, your local CLSC can refer you for free to a social worker or grief specialist near you.
Being there is already enough
You do not need perfect words, perfect answers, or a way to “fix” someone else’s pain. What you can offer is much simpler and far more valuable: your presence, without conditions and without a time limit.
Most of the time, what a grieving person needs is not to feel alone, to know that the person they loved is not forgotten, and that their pain is seen and respected without being minimized or compared.
A sincere message weeks after the funeral, a meal dropped off without warning, a memory shared out loud, or an object that keeps love close to the heart, these small and often invisible gestures are what make grief a little less lonely to carry.
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