E47: Grief Doesn’t Get Easier After a Year. Here’s Why Year Two Feels Even Harder.
You got through the first year of grief—but year two feels heavier, not lighter. Today, I’m sharing why grief often gets harder after the first year, what no one tells you about the second year of loss, and why struggling now doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong.
E46: Grief and Sleep: 11 Ways to Rest When You’re Sleeping Too Much or Not at All
Struggling with sleep after a loss? This episode explores how grief disrupts your ability to fall asleep—or makes you want to sleep all the time.
E45: Supporting Someone Grieving #5: Ask Shelby: What Do I Say to Someone Grieving?
If you want to know how to support a grieving friend without saying the wrong thing—or disappearing altogether—you are not alone. In this “Ask Shelby” episode, I share practical, compassionate guidance for what to say to someone grieving, using words that actually help in the days, months, and years after loss.
E44: How to Decide What to Keep After Someone Dies with Charlene Lam, Author of Curating Grief
What do you do with a person’s things after they die? Charlene Lam joins me to explore “the stuff of grief”—and how curating can become a meaningful, healing practice. We talk about her 3-step method, the roles objects play in grief, and why you may be more of a curator than you think.
E43: Why “Time Heals All” Is a Lie—and What Grievers Need Instead
“Time heals all” is one of the most commonly repeated phrases in grief support—but is it actually helpful? Discover the history behind this platitude, why it often causes more harm than good, and what actually supports healing after loss.
E42: 15 Grief Affirmations That Ground You WITHOUT Toxic Positivity | Listener Pick
If you’ve ever felt broken, lost, or completely alone in your grief, this episode is for you. I’m sharing 15 short, nonreligious affirmations that have brought me comfort and a sense of stability in grief’s hardest moments—along with insights from my students inside Life After Loss Academy.
E41: Stop Saying “I Can’t Imagine What You’re Going Through” to Grievers—Here’s Why | Listener Pick
You’ve probably heard it—or maybe even said it: “I can’t imagine what you’re going through.” It sounds compassionate on the surface, but it often creates emotional distance instead of connection. In this episode, I explain why this common sympathy phrase misses the mark for many grievers and what to say that’s actually comforting.