When people think of grief, their minds automatically go to bereavement.
However, this represents only one of over sixty losses people can experience in their lifetime. Unfortunately, different types of grief are judged differently, and often people’s grief about life transitions – like losing their job, divorce, or loss of health – are not as recognised and acknowledged as the grief of bereavement.
Many of us carry unrecognised grief that affects our wellbeing daily. We might feel stuck, anxious, or depressed without understanding why. The truth is, we don’t just grieve people; we grieve dreams, identities, abilities, safety, and countless other losses that shape our lives.
These losses are often minimised or dismissed, yet they require genuine grief work and healing. When grief goes unrecognised, it doesn’t disappear – it manifests as:
The impact extends beyond individuals. In workplaces, unrecognised grief affects productivity, engagement, and team dynamics. When organisations understand hidden grief, they create cultures where people feel genuinely supported through life’s inevitable transitions.
The end of relationships – whether through divorce, separation, estrangement, or friendship breakdowns – creates profound grief that’s rarely acknowledged with the same compassion as bereavement. Losing contact with someone who’s moved away or experiencing family estrangement leaves us grieving the relationship that was, the one we hoped for, and sometimes the community we’ve lost alongside it.
A chronic illness or disability diagnosis changes everything – not just physically, but emotionally and socially. We grieve lost independence, mobility, and the body we once had. Infertility and childlessness not by choice involve grieving a future that will never exist. Miscarriage brings complex grief that’s often minimised by others. Body changes from illness, surgery, or ageing can trigger grief for who we were. Watching cognitive decline in a loved one whilst they’re still alive creates anticipatory grief that goes unrecognised.
Late diagnosis of autism, ADHD, or other conditions brings grief for the support you didn’t receive, the childhood you didn’t have, and the years spent feeling wrong. Coming out can mean losing relationships or entire communities alongside finding authentic self-expression. Job loss or redundancy affects not just finances but professional identity and self-worth. Retirement brings grief for purpose and daily structure. Leaving a faith community means grieving spiritual home, community, and sometimes entire worldviews.
Empty nest grief is real, even when you’re happy for your children’s independence. Relocating or emigrating means grieving place, community, and familiar rhythms. Losing your home through financial hardship carries shame that compounds the grief. Having to rehome a beloved pet creates genuine loss that’s often dismissed as just an animal.
Sometimes we grieve what never was – unfulfilled life goals, the gap between the life we expected and the life we have, lost future plans like cancelled weddings or abandoned career paths. This grief is particularly hidden because we’re mourning something that never existed, yet the pain is entirely real.
Loss of financial security affects every aspect of life and often carries shame. After trauma or abuse, we grieve lost feelings of safety in the world. Loss of trust – in institutions, systems, or specific people – changes how we navigate relationships and society. These invisible losses profoundly impact daily functioning.
Whether you’re an individual seeking to understand your own grief experiences or an organisation wanting to support your teams, these workshops provide comprehensive guidance:
Available workshops include:
Available for individual learning or as organisational training
Through one-to-one coaching, I help individuals recognise and process hidden grief. We work together to:
I help organisations understand that grief extends far beyond bereavement and develop practical approaches to support their people through life’s inevitable transitions. Through evidence-based education and compassionate consultancy, we work together to:
My book “Dealing with Grief” provides comprehensive guidance for understanding grief beyond bereavement, with practical tools for supporting yourself and others through hidden losses.
When we acknowledge that grief extends far beyond death, we:
Whether you’re supporting colleagues, friends, family members, or yourself, understanding hidden grief gives you the tools to recognise and respond to loss that often goes unseen.