The Stages of Grief

Sally Hunt, in my bereavement counselling room. You will find me emapthetic and understanding.

There are five stages of grief, first described by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, whose work I have read many times and return to still.

Denial. Anger. Bargaining. Depression. Acceptance.

This is the framework I work with — not as a checklist, but as a map of experiences that many bereaved people recognise.

Grief is not a straight line. You may move through these stages in any order. You may have already passed through some of them before you come to see me. You may not experience all of them. There is no correct sequence, and no timetable.

What I will do is help you understand where you are as we work together — naming what you are feeling as it happens, not before.

On Grief
and
Grieving

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross
and
David Kessler

“You will never be the same.” — Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, On Grief and Grieving

This is not a failure of grief. It is what grief does. You are not trying to return to who you were — you are learning to carry the loss forward into a new version of yourself. That is the work we do together.

Ready to Talk?

 Many people find the first call the hardest. It is completely normal to be upset when you phone — I am used to it, and it will not make the conversation difficult. A brief call is enough to get started.

Call: 0771 516 0337

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