Grief Support
Each of us mourns the death of a loved one differently. While some people attempt to cope with their grief by themselves and do not want or need outside assistance, many others seek and find comfort in sharing the pain, anger, depression and other emotions they feel following a loss.
The thing about grief is that we all experience it at some point: perhaps when we lose a parent, a grandparent, a sibling, a spouse, a friend, a child, a pet, or anyone that was part of our lives.
Sometimes grief comes not as a result of a death but because our lives have changed: relationships end, moves happen, jobs change, and a whole host of other changes in our lives.
Grief is all around us, but our world does a poor job allowing people to grieve. People will bring casseroles and tell you to call if you need anything but then life moves forward, and you get the very clear message that you should move on and get over it.
We need to change how we think about grief. It is okay to grieve, and it is normal to struggle with how to exist in the world that you now live in without the person, pet, job, or other loss that we have experienced.
It would be my honor to journey with you and to assist you in finding ways to adjust to the “new normal” in your life. You never “get over” grief and the loss of a loved one, we just learn to live our lives without them being present.
I have been helping people over the last 15 years as a chaplain, minister, hospice chaplain, and soul friend. This experience has given me a wealth of information and insight on grief, and I am ready to share all of it with you so that you can begin healing.
I provide individual sessions and well as group sessions.
If you are in need of Grief Support or you would like more information, contact me