How Psychotherapy Helps with Grief

Grief is exhausting in ways that catch people off guard. The sadness you expected, but the rage at someone for asking how you’re doing and the guilt about laughing at something two weeks after the funeral, you didn’t. Therapy for grief gives you somewhere to bring all of it without anyone telling you to move on or remember the good times.

Most people who are grieving simply need time and space to feel what they feel. But when months have passed and the intensity hasn’t softened at all or when loss has triggered depression or anxiety that’s taken on a life of its own, professional support can help.

Complicated Grief Treatment (CGT)

Complicated Grief Treatment (CGT) was developed for people whose grief has become stuck. The pain stays at the same level it was in the first weeks and you feel like your life stopped the day the person died. You avoid everything connected to them or you can’t change a single thing in your house because that would make the loss real. CGT uses a structured approach to help you process the reality of the death and gradually re-engage with your own life. It also works on the specific obstacles keeping you stuck, whether that’s guilt about something left unsaid or the belief that moving forward somehow betrays their memory.

Interpersonal Therapy (IPT)

Interpersonal Therapy (IPT) helps when grief has disrupted your relationships in ways you can’t seem to repair on your own. Loss reshuffles your entire social world and friendships can fracture when people don’t know what to say to you. Family relationships strain when everyone grieves differently and you might withdraw from everyone because being around people feels exhausting or because you can’t tolerate how life keeps moving for everyone else while yours has stopped. IPT helps you navigate those disruptions and rebuild the connections that support your healing.

Psychodynamic Approaches

Psychodynamic approaches become relevant when a current loss reactivates grief from earlier in your life or when the relationship with the person who died was complicated. You can mourn someone who hurt you and can feel relief and devastation at the same time. You might grieve the relationship you wished you’d had rather than the one you did and when loss is tangled up with ambivalence and old wounds, psychodynamic therapy provides space to sort through those layers so you can move on with your life.

Mindfulness and Acceptance-Based Approaches

Mindfulness and acceptance-based approaches help when you’re fighting your grief rather than allowing yourself to feel it. Some people intellectualize their loss by keeping busy and staying productive because they’re afraid of what happens when they stop. Others are overwhelmed by it and unable to function because the pain feels unsurvivable. Mindfulness work teaches you to be present with grief in doses you can tolerate and to let the waves come without being swept under and without shutting them down.

Your therapist at Inspire understands that grief touches everything.

There’s no timeline for grief and we won’t impose one. What we will do is make sure you have a space where your loss is taken seriously and where someone is paying close enough attention to notice if you need more support than talk therapy alone can provide.

How Psychotherapy Helps Grieving Children

Children grieve in bursts. Your child might be sobbing one moment and asking for a snack five minutes later. That isn’t callousness or a sign they don’t understand what happened. Their developing brain processes loss in small doses because taking it all in at once would be overwhelming. A seven-year-old who asks “is Grandma still dead?” at breakfast isn’t being insensitive. They’re testing whether this impossible thing is still true, because their brain hasn’t fully accepted that death is a permanent state.

How grief shows up depends almost entirely on your child’s age. Young children act out their grief through play, regression, physical complaints and behavioral changes rather than talking about sadness. Your previously toilet-trained four-year-old starts having accidents or suddenly can’t be alone at bedtime. Teenagers may look like they don’t care at all, retreating into their phone or their room, when privately they’re devastated and have no idea what to do with feelings this big.

Play Therapy

Play therapy gives younger children a way to process what they can’t put into words. A five-year-old won’t sit down and tell you they’re afraid you’re going to die too but they might act it out with toy figures or replay the funeral over and over in imaginative play. These allow your child’s brain to work through something incomprehensible using the only language it has. The therapist gently guides and introduces coping strategies through the play itself rather than through conversation your child isn’t developmentally ready for.

CBT Adapted for Bereaved Children and Teens

CBT adapted for bereaved children and teens helps older children and adolescents identify the specific thoughts making their grief harder to carry. A twelve-year-old convinced the death was somehow their fault or a teenager who believes they’ll never feel happy again about anything feels like facts to your child. Therapy helps them examine those beliefs carefully and develop a more accurate understanding of their loss without dismissing the pain behind it.

Family-Based Grief Work

Family-based grief work recognizes that you’re all navigating this at the same time. Your child watches how you grieve and takes cues from your behavior so if you never mention the person who died, your child learns grief is something to hide. If you’re consumed by your own pain, your child may suppress theirs to protect you. A therapist helps you find the balance between being honest about your sadness and providing the stability your child needs to feel safe. They also help you read the grief signals your child is sending, because a sudden drop in grades or a new fear of car rides after someone died in an accident are grief talking, even when your child can’t say so.

Adolescent grief work looks different because teenagers are dealing with loss while simultaneously navigating identity formation and the growing awareness that the world is unpredictable and unfair. Your teenager might refuse to talk to you about their grief but open up to a therapist. They might process loss through music or art or they might seem angry at everything and everyone, including you. A therapist who works with bereaved teenagers knows how to meet them where they are without pushing too hard or backing off too far.

One thing that helps parents to know is that children re-grieve at different developmental stages. Your child may seem to have processed the loss well at age six, only to have grief resurface at sixteen when they realize the person won’t be at their graduation. This is normal and expected. It doesn’t mean the earlier therapy failed.

At Inspire, your child’s therapist monitors for signs that grief has crossed into clinical depression or anxiety and communicates with the wider care team if additional support becomes necessary.

Children don’t grieve on a schedule and they won’t always show you what they need in ways that are easy to read. Your child’s therapist guides you on when to worry and when to trust the process, and stays involved as your child grows into new stages of understanding about their loss.

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