Grief Support Groups on the Gold Coast: Workshops Forming Now
Gold Coast Counselling
Grief can be one of the loneliest things a person carries, even in a city full of people. The world moves on, the casseroles stop arriving, and you are left holding a loss that nobody seems to want to talk about anymore.
I am bringing grief support workshops to the Gold Coast, small groups for people carrying loss. This is what they are, who they help, and how to put your name down for the first one.
Grief is heavy to carry alone
In the early days after a loss, people show up. Then, often far too soon, the support thins out and you are expected to be getting back to normal, while inside nothing is normal at all.
That is the stretch where a lot of grief gets carried in private, behind a coping face. It is exhausting, and it is not how humans were built to grieve. We were built to do it in company.
What a grief support group actually is
A grief support group is simply a small circle of people who are also carrying loss, held in a gentle, structured space. It is not therapy in a clinical sense, and it is not a place where anyone tells you how you should feel or when you should be over it.
It is somewhere you can speak honestly, or just listen, among people who understand without you having to explain. Sometimes the relief is simply being in a room where grief does not have to be hidden.
Why grieving alongside others helps
There is something that eases when you discover you are not the only one. The strange thoughts, the guilt, the days you function and the days you cannot, the way grief ambushes you in a supermarket aisle. Hearing someone else describe it makes you feel less broken and less alone.
A group also gives grief somewhere to go. Said out loud and received by people who get it, the weight shifts in a way it rarely does when it stays locked inside.
What these Gold Coast workshops will be
The workshops I am forming will be small and unhurried, a held space rather than a lecture. Gentle structure, room to share or stay quiet, and a pace that respects where each person is. No fixing, no rushing, no being talked out of your grief.
I want to be straight with you about where this is up to. The groups are forming now, based on interest, so they are not yet running on a set timetable. That is exactly why registering your interest matters, it is how the first group comes together.

Group or one-on-one? Both have a place
A group is not the right fit for everyone, and I would rather be honest about that than sign you up to something that does not suit you. Some people heal best in the privacy of one-on-one counselling, where the whole hour is theirs.
Others find the shared circle is exactly what they needed. Many people do both, a group for the not-alone feeling and individual sessions for the deeper, private work. There is no wrong choice, only what fits you.
You do not have to perform your grief
A common worry is that a group means having to talk, to cry on cue, to share before you are ready. It does not. You can come and listen for as long as you need, and speak only when, or if, you want to.
There is no right way to grieve and no standard to meet. You bring exactly what you bring, and that is enough.
There is no timeline on loss
One of the quiet cruelties of grief is the sense that there is a deadline, that by now you should be coping, moving on, back to yourself. Grief does not work to anyone’s schedule, and a loss can ache years later in ways that surprise you.
A grief group is one of the few places that does not expect you to be finished. Whether your loss was last month or a decade ago, if it still weighs on you, you belong in the circle.
Grief counselling you can begin now
While the groups come together, you do not have to wait to be supported. One-on-one grief counselling is available now, online or by phone, and the healing it offers is steady and private.
You can read how that work runs on the grief counselling page, and how it reaches people across the region on the grief counselling Gold Coast page. Starting one-on-one now and joining a group later is a perfectly good path.
When a group is not the right tool
I would rather point you to the right help than the nearest one. If your grief is very raw, or tangled with thoughts of not wanting to be here, a group is not where to start. Please speak to your GP, and in a crisis call Lifeline on 13 11 14 or 000.
Some grief is complicated enough that private, one-on-one support comes first, with a group later when you are ready. We can work out together what suits where you are.
Register your interest for the first group
The Gold Coast grief workshops will start once there are enough people ready, so the single most useful thing you can do is put your name down. There is no obligation in it, and it costs nothing to register.
You will be the first to hear when a group is set, and your interest genuinely helps it happen sooner. You can see how the wider work runs on the counselling on the Gold Coast page.
Five-star Google reviewsWhat clients experience after grief support with Christina
“I truly felt heard for the first time in all my life and deeply understood.”
Put your name down for the first group
Grief support workshops are forming on the Gold Coast now, and the best way to be part of the first one is to register your interest. There is no obligation, and you will be the first to hear when a group is set.
If you would rather not wait, one-on-one grief counselling is available now, and a free 15-minute chat is the simplest way to start. Either way, you do not have to carry this alone.
You can also read the wall of Google reviews from people across Gold Coast and beyond.
A few quick questions
When do the Gold Coast grief groups start?
They are forming now, based on interest, rather than running to a fixed timetable yet. The best way to be part of the first group is to register your interest, you will be told first when a group is set, and your interest helps it happen sooner.
Is it a group or one-on-one counselling?
The grief workshops are small groups, and they are still forming. One-on-one grief counselling is available right now, online or by phone, if you would rather not wait or prefer private support. Many people do both.
Do I have to talk or share in the group?
No. You can come and simply listen for as long as you need, and speak only if and when you want to. There is no pressure and no right way to grieve. You bring what you bring, and that is enough.