Loss does not arrive gently. It announces itself either with a sudden, shattering blow or with a slow, anticipatory ache that follows a long diagnosis that teaches a family, day by day, what helplessness truly feels like. It tears through the fabric of daily life.
When loss follows illness, grief begins long before death. It lives in hospital corridors heavy with antiseptic air, in the rhythmic beeping of machines and in the silent bargaining of prayers whispered beside a bed. You witness the torment unfold: treatments that sap strength, hope flickering amid relentless pain. It lives in watching a father or loved one, once strong and protective writhe in pain, diminish in energy and slowly surrender control over his own body.
Each hospital visit becomes a rehearsal for farewell, even as the mind stubbornly refuses to believe the final act will truly arrive. And then, one day, it does.
That day divides life irrevocably into before and after. The moment of death carries a stillness that words struggle to contain. The last breath whether witnessed or imagined later imprints itself permanently on the heart and mind. Time fractures. Some remember every detail with cruel clarity, others remember almost nothing, as though the psyche mercifully draws a veil over the unbearable. The body goes numb while the soul struggles to comprehend what the mind cannot yet accept, a rupture that Viktor Frankl described as the moment when meaning itself feels endangered.
In the days that follow, rituals, funeral rites, prayers, condolences offer structure when the inner world is in chaos. Friends, relatives and neighbours arrive in numbers. The house is full. Shared meals, repeated phrases of comfort and shared tears serve an essential psychological function. In these early days, grief is held collectively. It feels heavy, yet carried. But grief is patient. It does not end with rituals. It merely relocates.
As days pass and life resumes for the world outside, support ebbs. Silence descends upon a household now one member short. It is the daughter sorting untouched clothes with trembling hands ; clothes, shoes that will never again be worn, the son confronting responsibilities once shared, the spouse staring at an empty chair across the dinner table, with eyes fixed on the gate for his/ her return, for his/ her glimpse . Questions linger: Will joy return? How do we carry on without him or her? In this quiet persistence of loss, Jean-Paul Sartre’s reflection that absence is the invisible form of presence finds lived meaning, as grief settles not as emptiness but as something constantly felt.
Grief now becomes intimate, persistent and profoundly personal. Absence announces itself in small, piercing ways ; an unanswered phone call, an empty chair, a routine that no longer makes sense. An absence that refuses to go unnoticed.
Each member of the family grieves differently.
A son may grieve the sudden weight of responsibility, the unspoken realization that he must now become what his parent once was. His grief may surface as restlessness, anger or an urgent need to remain strong, often at the cost of his own emotional expression. Many sons mask pain behind stoic duty.
A daughter may grieve the loss of emotional refuge ; the presence that offered unquestioned safety. Her grief may appear as yearning, guilt or an aching desire to hear her parent’s voice one more time, to ask one more question, to receive one more blessing. Many daughters carry the quiet burden of bedside “what ifs.”
A spouse experiences perhaps the most disorienting grief of all. This is not only the loss of a loved one, but the loss of a shared life, shared routines and shared silences. The bed feels too large. Decisions feel heavier. Loneliness arrives even in crowded rooms and settles into familiar spaces. This grief is often dignified and restrained, yet profoundly misunderstood.
There is no hierarchy in grief, no correct timeline and no universal pattern. Some cry openly while others become functional to the point of emotional invisibility. Some seek solitude, others fear it. None of these responses reflect weakness. They are the psyche’s attempts to survive an existential rupture. Tears, numbness, anger, faith, doubt, exhaustion and even moments of unexpected calm are all legitimate languages of loss.
I write this not only as a counselling psychologist, but also as someone who knows grief from the inside. I lost my father unexpectedly years ago, at a time when I had no preparation for such a rupture. That loss reshaped how I understand life, attachment, vulnerability and resilience. It taught me that grief does not diminish simply because time passes; rather, it evolves as we learn slowly and imperfectly how to live around it.
In my work and in my own journey, I have learned that pain does not need to be conquered for life to continue. Meaning often emerges not through forgetting, but through gentle re-engagement with life: small acts of care, relationships that allow remembrance without judgment and moments of rest from sorrow without guilt. Healing is not the absence of pain, but the quiet realization that love and loss can coexist. Grief is not something one gets over; it is something one learns to carry.
Religious and spiritual traditions echo this understanding. Islam recognizes loss as a trial and patience as dignified endurance, affirming grief through the Prophet’s (Peace be upon Him ) tears. Christianity sanctifies sorrow through Jesus’s ( Peace be upon Him ) tears while offering hope beyond death. Hindu philosophy views death as transition rather than annihilation, emphasizing continuity of the self. Sikhism emphasizes remembrance, balance and acceptance of the divine order in the face of loss. Across traditions, a shared truth emerges ; ‘hope is meaningful only when grief is allowed its rightful place’.
For those who have lost a loved one, sacred times and festivals can reopen wounds in unexpected ways. The first Ramadan without a parent may feel unbearably hollow ; the empty place at iftar, the missing voice in prayer. Eid, Christmas, Diwali, Gurpurab or any cherished celebration may arrive not as joy, but as a reminder of who is no longer there.
If you find yourself dreading these days, know that this response is natural. Allow yourself to engage at your own pace. You may choose to uphold some rituals and gently modify others. You may find comfort in charity, planting a sapling in their memory, offering a prayer, lighting a lamp or simply speaking their name in silence. Grief alters rituals; this is not disrespect, but adaptation.
Most importantly, remember that missing them deeply is a testament to the bond you shared and share. Love does not vanish with death; it finds new ways to express itself. With time, these sacred moments may still carry sorrow, but they may also begin to hold tenderness, gratitude and a sense of continuity.
To those who have lost a loved one: your grief is valid. Your exhaustion is real. Your moments of numbness, anger, confusion and even fleeting relief do not make you unloving. They make you human. Allow yourself to mourn in your own language. Continuing to live is not a betrayal of the one you lost; it is often the most profound way of honouring them.
To grieve is not to break. It is to learn how love continues in the presence of absence.
The writer is Counseling Psychologist
qureshipsy1113@gmail.com

