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Grief & loss

Loneliness after loss

Loss doesn't just take a person. It takes the routines built around them, the role you played in their life, the social world that existed because they were in it. The loneliness of grief is one of the most acute forms there is — and one of the least understood by people who aren't going through it.

This guide covers the different forms loss takes, and the specific loneliness that follows each one.

Losing a partner

The loneliness of losing the person who made the world make sense.

When a partner dies, the loss is not just the person — it's the daily texture of a shared life. The routines, the inside references, the person who knew you longest. The social world built around being a couple often evaporates at the same time.

Loss of spouseWidower lonelinessYoung widowSupport for widowersSupport for widows

Losing a parent or sibling

The grief that doesn't have a script.

Losing a parent restructures identity in ways that are hard to explain to people who haven't experienced it. Losing a sibling can be even more invisible — the world doesn't always have language for it. Both can leave a particular kind of loneliness.

Grief for a parentLoneliness after bereavementGrief and loneliness

Losing a child

A grief that almost nobody around you can reach.

The loss of a child — through death, stillbirth, or neonatal death — sits in a category that most people cannot imagine and society rarely acknowledges. The isolation that follows is often total.

Bereaved parent lonelinessPregnancy lossInfant loss

Other losses

Losses the world doesn't always name.

Not all grief follows a death. The end of a long friendship, a relationship, a career, a pet — these can produce real grief that goes unacknowledged. Disenfranchised grief is lonelier because it is invisible.

Complicated griefPet lossFriendship endingDisenfranchised griefAmbiguous griefSuicide loss survivor

Related reading

Loneliness by ageLoneliness and healthLoneliness in relationshipsLoneliness at workHow to overcome lonelinessWhat loneliness actually is

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