Grief & Loss
Understanding bereavement, loss, and the path throughHow to Show Up
Good intentions and helpful actions are not always the same thing. What genuine presence looks like — and what to avoid.
Read Article →Grief Is Not a Staircase
The five stages of grief are deeply embedded in our culture — but decades of research suggest grief is far more individual and non-linear.
Read Article →Finding Light in the Darkness
When loss happens suddenly or violently, grief becomes more complex. What the research says about traumatic grief and post-traumatic growth.
Read Article →When You Lose Your Person
The death of a spouse is not only the loss of a person — it is the loss of a shared self, a shared future, a shared ordinary life.
Read Article →The Weight of Still Being Here
When a partner dies, grief is not the only thing that arrives. For many survivors, guilt follows quietly behind — guilt for being alive, for feeling relief.
Read Article →Grief No One Talks About
When a loved one dies by suicide or substance use, survivors grieve in the shadow of stigma. Their loss is real — and too often they carry it alone.
Read Article →What Do I Tell the Kids?
Helping children understand serious illness and death is one of the hardest conversations a family can have. What the research says about doing it well.
Read Article →Who You Are, and Who You’re Becoming
Identity is not a destination. It is a living thing — shaped by relationships, culture, and every transition you move through across a life.
Read Article →Caregiving
For family caregivers navigating illness, aging, and end of lifeFinding Yourself Again After Caregiving
When caregiving ends, you face not just the heartbreak of loss, but a profound question: Who am I now? Research-backed guidance on grief, identity, and moving forward.
Read Article →When the Person Who Needs Care Hurt You
Caring for a parent who abused or neglected you is among the most complicated situations an adult can face. You are not obligated — and if you choose to, you deserve real support.
Read Article →Understanding Dementia: A Guide for Families
From diagnosis to daily care: what families need to know about dementia types, stages, treatment options, legal planning, and supporting yourself through it.
Read Article →The Hidden Cost of Caring
Caregiving demands more than physical effort — it requires constant emotional management. Understanding emotional labor and burnout is the first step toward protecting yourself.
Read Article →What You Can Still Do
Facing serious illness or the end of your life is among the most profound things a human being can experience. A guide for the person who is ill, and the meaningful work still available.
Read Article →Questions to Ask When a Loved One Is Seriously Ill
A practical family guide covering the medical, legal, financial, and personal questions to ask — and who to ask — when someone you love faces serious or terminal illness.
Read Article →Palliative Care & Hospice: A Compassionate Guide
Two types of care that are widely misunderstood, often avoided, and profoundly valuable. The differences, the questions to ask, and the decisions families face.
Read Article →Relationships & Communication
Navigating conflict, boundaries, and difficult conversationsThe Power of No
Setting limits is not selfishness — it’s survival. A research-backed guide to recognizing when boundaries are needed, how to establish them, and what to do when they’re tested.
Read Article →Boundaries in High-Conflict Situations
Divorce, workplace disputes, toxic family dynamics — when conflict is constant, limits aren’t just helpful. Evidence-based strategies including the BIFF method.
Read Article →How to Communicate Without Getting Defensive
Defensiveness is a natural survival response — but it escalates conflict. Three research-backed skills for navigating even the most difficult conversations.
Read Article →How to Fight Fair
Conflict in close relationships is inevitable. How you conduct yourself inside it determines whether it brings you closer or costs you something you can’t get back.
Read Article →The Power of the Pause
Why arguments so quickly become something you can’t take back — and what actually happens in your body when you stop before responding.
Read Article →Letting Go of Who You Needed Them to Be
Some of the most persistent grief in a life is not for someone who died — it is for someone who was never going to be who you needed. Releasing that hope is real loss.
Read Article →RLT Conflict Resolution Worksheet
A structured five-phase guided worksheet — rooted in Relational Life Therapy — for two partners to feel genuinely heard, reflect honestly, and move forward together.
Open Worksheet →Trauma & Healing
Secondary trauma, childhood wounds, compassion fatigue, and recoveryWhen the Healer Hurts
Professionals who care for trauma survivors can absorb the weight of others’ pain. An in-depth look at secondary traumatic stress, compassion fatigue, and evidence-based paths to recovery.
Read Article →When the Past Speaks Louder Than the Present
You react more strongly than the moment seems to warrant. Understanding why this happens — and what to do about it — is some of the most important work a person can undertake.
Read Article →The Long Shadow of Childhood Parentification
If you were ever the emotional caretaker of your own parent, you were doing something children were never meant to do. Understanding parentification — and recovering from it.
Read Article →Letting Go of Who You Needed Them to Be
Some of the most persistent grief in a life is not for someone who died — it is for someone who was never going to be who you needed. Releasing that hope is real loss. And it is workable.
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