Grief Counselling: When Loss Changes Everything
Counselling Journey
Grief can make ordinary life feel strangely unfamiliar.
The kettle boils. The phone lights up. Someone asks a normal question, and some part of you is still standing in the moment before everything changed.
This is a slower look at what grief counselling can offer when loss has rearranged your life and you need somewhere safe to put the truth of it.
Grief counselling starts by making room for what happened
Most people do not come to grief counselling because they want someone to make the grief disappear.
They come because carrying it alone has become too much. Sometimes the loss is recent and raw. Sometimes it happened years ago, but the body still knows the date, the room, the phone call, the silence after.
Grief needs a place where it does not have to be polite. You might cry, or you might feel nothing at all. You might miss someone and feel angry with them. You might be grieving a person, a relationship, a future, a version of yourself, or the life you thought you were going to have.
The first work is not fixing. It is allowing the whole shape of the loss to be spoken without rushing you towards acceptance.
“I truly felt heard for the first time in all my life and deeply understood.”

There is no correct way to grieve
People often judge their grief while they are inside it.
They wonder if they are crying too much or not enough. They wonder if they should be further along. They wonder why one small thing can undo them after a day of functioning. They wonder why everyone else seems to have returned to normal while their own inner world has not.
In grief counselling, those reactions are not treated as evidence that you are doing grief badly. They are listened to as information. Numbness can be protection. Anger can be love with nowhere to go. Exhaustion can be the body finally telling the truth.
“Christina creates such a safe and beautiful space.”

The complicated parts deserve space too
Some grief is clean in the way people expect. Much of it is not.
There may be guilt, regret, relief, resentment, unfinished words, family pressure, spiritual questions, or memories that do not fit neatly inside the public story of the loss. These are often the parts people keep hidden because they seem too difficult to explain.
Christina works gently with those layers. The aim is not to make you defend what you feel. It is to understand why those pieces are there, and what they have been asking you to carry.
This is where healing can begin to feel less like moving on and more like no longer abandoning yourself inside the loss.
“I was able to see core issues that I was not able to recognise before.”

A shift may feel very small at first
In grief work, change is rarely loud.
It might be sleeping through one night. Eating without forcing it. Saying their name without collapsing. Letting a memory come and go without bracing. Realising you can love what was lost and still answer a message, water a plant, or step outside for ten minutes.
None of this means the loss matters less. It means your system has found a little more room around it.
“This morning I feel so much lighter and clear.”

Life can hold memory and movement
The aim is not to become someone untouched by loss.
The aim is to help you live with the loss in a way that does not take every room inside you. Some days will still hurt. Some dates will still carry weight. Some memories will still arrive without asking.
But life can slowly make space for more than grief. Connection can return. Meaning can return differently. You can carry love, pain, memory and future in the same body.
“For the first time in a long time I am finally thriving again.”

If you want the shorter service overview, the grief counselling page keeps the practical details clear. You can also read more about Christina, or spend time with the reviews and testimonials before deciding.
You can bring the grief exactly as it is
You do not have to make it tidy before asking for support. A free 15-minute assessment gives you a quiet way to meet Christina, ask what you need to ask, and sense whether this feels like the right space.
Book the free 15-minute assessment
A few quick questions
Can grief counselling help if the loss happened years ago?
Yes. Grief does not follow a calendar. If a loss still affects your body, relationships, sleep, identity or sense of meaning, it is valid to bring it into counselling.
What if I feel numb instead of sad?
Numbness is common in grief. It can be the nervous system protecting you from too much at once. You do not need to force tears for the work to be real.
Will grief counselling make me move on?
No. The work is not to erase the bond or rush you into moving on. It is to help you carry the loss with more support and less isolation.