Grief & Loss Care: Practical Tools, Guided Practices, and Worksheets

Grief & loss can affect every part of life, whether the loss is recent, ongoing, or hard to name.

Supportive tools to help you ground, process, and gently integrate loss—at your own pace. You don’t need to do everything. Start with what feels manageable today.

Instant Support for Grief Waves

These tools are designed for moments when grief feels sudden, heavy, or overwhelming. No deep reflection required—just gentle grounding.

Instant Tools

When Grief Feels Heavy Right Now:

Gentle tools for moments when emotions feel sudden, intense, or hard to carry.

Grounding Through the Body

(pure regulation, no emotion naming)

Gentle physical grounding when grief feels overwhelming.

  • When grief feels overwhelming or sudden
  • When your body feels tense, heavy, or disconnected
  • When thinking or talking feels like too much
  • Find a comfortable position, seated or standing
  • You can keep your eyes open or closed
  • Move slowly—there is no right way to do this

1. Notice Your Contact With the Ground
Bring your attention to where your body makes contact—your feet, legs, back, or seat.
Without changing anything, simply notice the points of support beneath you.

Pause for a few breaths.


2. Gentle Pressure
If it feels okay, press your feet slightly into the floor or your body into the chair.
Let the pressure remind your nervous system that you are supported.

Pause.


3. Name Three Physical Sensations
Silently name three neutral or tolerable sensations you can feel right now.
Examples: warmth, pressure, weight, texture, temperature.

There is no need to find “calm.”


4. Slow the Exhale
Take a slow breath in through your nose.
Let the exhale be slightly longer than the inhale.

Repeat this 3 times, at your own pace.


5. Orient to the Present
Gently look around and name:

  • One thing you can see
  • One thing you can hear
  • One thing you can touch

Let your body register that this moment is safe enough.


Closing

You can stop here, or repeat any part that felt helpful.
Grounding doesn’t remove grief—it helps you carry it more steadily.

One-Minute Anchors for Grief

(very brief, time-contained)

Grief can arrive suddenly, even when you’re functioning on the surface. This tool offers a brief pause to help your nervous system re-orient when emotions feel close to the edge, without requiring deep processing.

  • When grief feels sudden or intrusive
  • When you need something short and contained
  • When your mind feels scattered or overwhelmed
  • This practice takes about one minute
  • You can do it anywhere, at any time
  • There is no need to feel calmer afterward

1. Orient to Your Environment
Gently look around and name one thing you can see that feels neutral or steady.
Let your eyes rest there for a moment.


2. Connect With Your Body
Place one hand on your body where it feels most grounding—your chest, abdomen, or thighs.
Notice the temperature or pressure of your hand.


3. Slow the Breath
Take one slow breath in through your nose.
Let the exhale be slightly longer than the inhale.


4. Name This Moment
Silently say to yourself:
“Right now, I am here.”


Closing

You don’t need to stay here longer than feels right.
Even brief pauses help your system remember that this moment is survivable.

Breathing With Grief

(paced, predictable)

Grief often changes the way we breathe without us realizing it—shorter breaths, holding the breath, or feeling tight in the chest.
This tool gently supports your nervous system through breathing, without trying to remove grief or force calm.

  • When grief feels heavy in the chest or throat
  • When your body feels tense, shallow, or unsettled
  • When you want gentle regulation without emotional processing
  • You can sit or stand—choose what feels easiest
  • There is no “correct” breathing rhythm
  • If any step feels uncomfortable, you can stop or adjust

1. Notice Your Natural Breath
Without changing anything, notice how you are breathing right now.
Is it shallow or deep? Fast or slow? There is no need to judge or correct it.

Pause for a moment.


2. Invite a Slightly Longer Exhale
Take a slow breath in through your nose.
As you breathe out, allow the exhale to be just a little longer than the inhale.

You might imagine the breath gently leaving your body rather than being pushed out.


3. Repeat at Your Own Pace
Continue breathing this way for two to five breaths.
Let your shoulders soften if they want to.
Let your jaw unclench if it feels safe.


4. Add a Quiet Phrase (Optional)
If it feels helpful, silently say on the exhale:
“I’m allowed to breathe through this.”

This is not a command—just an offering.


5. Return to the Present
Gently notice the room around you.
Let your breath return to its natural rhythm when you’re ready.


Closing

Breathing with grief doesn’t make it disappear.
It simply gives your body a little more space to carry what’s here.

Visual Anchor for Heavy Moments

(non-verbal regulation)

When grief feels overwhelming, the mind often drifts into memories, images, or worries connected to what was lost.
This tool gently brings your attention back to the present moment using sight, without needing to think or process.

  • When your thoughts feel pulled into grief memories
  • When emotions feel heavy or foggy
  • When you need grounding without words
  • You can do this with your eyes open
  • Choose a neutral or comforting object nearby
  • There is no right amount of time to spend

1. Choose One Visual Point
Look around and select one object in your environment.
It might be a plant, a wall, a piece of furniture, or something outside a window.

Let this be something neutral—not emotionally charged.


2. Let Your Eyes Rest
Allow your gaze to settle gently on this object.
Notice its shape, color, or texture without analyzing or naming it too much.

Simply let your eyes stay.


3. Breathe While You Look
As you continue to look, take two or three slow breaths.
There’s no need to change how you breathe—just allow breath and sight to coexist.


4. Notice the Present Moment
Silently acknowledge:
“Right now, I am here.”

Let that be enough.


Closing

This tool doesn’t ask you to move away from grief.
It simply offers your nervous system a place to rest for a moment.

Holding Space Without Fixing

(relational self-compassion)

Grief often brings a powerful urge to understand, solve, or make meaning too quickly. This tool offers a way to be present with what you’re feeling without trying to fix it, explain it, or move past it.

  • When you feel pressure to “figure out” your grief
  • When self-criticism or urgency shows up
  • When you want gentler self-presence instead of effort
  • Find a comfortable position
  • You don’t need to reflect on memories or events
  • This practice is about presence, not progress

1. Place a Hand on Your Body
Gently place one hand on your chest, abdomen, or wherever feels most grounding.
Let the weight of your hand be supportive rather than directive.


2. Acknowledge What’s Here
Silently say to yourself:
“Something in me is hurting right now.”

You don’t need to name it or explain it.


3. Release the Need to Fix
Now gently say:
“I don’t have to solve this in this moment.”

Notice if your body softens, even slightly.


4. Stay With the Breath
Take two or three natural breaths.
Let your hand and your breath simply be present together.


Closing

Grief doesn’t always need insight or action.
Sometimes it only needs to be allowed.

Riding the Wave (Without Fighting It)

(acceptance-based, slightly deeper)

Grief often arrives in waves—rising, intensifying, and then slowly easing. This tool helps you stay with the experience of grief without trying to push it away or make it disappear.

  • When grief feels intense or emotionally overwhelming
  • When you notice yourself resisting or bracing against the feeling
  • When you want to move through grief without forcing resolution
  • You can sit, stand, or lie down
  • You don’t need to focus on memories or meanings
  • Stop at any point if it feels like too much

1. Notice Where the Wave Is
Bring your attention to where grief shows up in your body.
You might feel it in your chest, throat, stomach, or as heaviness throughout.

There is no need to change it.


2. Imagine the Wave
Gently imagine the sensation as a wave in the ocean.
It rises, peaks, and falls on its own timeline.

You are not the wave—you are the one noticing it.


3. Breathe While It Moves
As the sensation shifts, let your breath move naturally with it.
There’s no need to deepen or control the breath.

Just stay present.


4. Allow the Wave to Pass
Notice if the intensity changes, even slightly.
If it doesn’t, that’s okay too.

The goal is not relief—it’s allowing.


Closing

Waves do not need to be stopped to pass.
Grief moves in its own time, and you can move with it.

Name the Feeling, Name the Need

(light cognitive contact)

Grief often brings multiple emotions at once, which can feel confusing or overwhelming. This tool helps create gentle clarity by naming what you’re feeling and what you need—without requiring action, solutions, or fixing.

  • When emotions feel tangled or hard to describe
  • When you feel overwhelmed but don’t know why
  • When you want clarity without pressure to change anything
  • You can do this silently or write it down
  • There are no “right” answers
  • You don’t need to act on what you notice

1. Pause and Check In
Take a moment to notice what is happening inside you right now.
You don’t need to sort or analyze—just notice.


2. Name the Feeling
Quietly name the emotion that feels most present.
If it’s hard to find one word, that’s okay.
Examples might include sadness, anger, longing, numbness, guilt, or confusion.

If nothing fits, you can simply say: “Something is here.”


3. Name the Need
Now gently ask yourself:
“What do I need most in this moment?”

This might be rest, space, comfort, distraction, reassurance, or nothing at all.

Let the answer come without judging it.


4. Allow Both to Exist
Hold the feeling and the need together for a few breaths.
You don’t have to solve either one.


Closing

Naming doesn’t make grief go away.
It helps your nervous system feel seen instead of overwhelmed.

If All You Can Do Is Survive This Moment

(last-resort safety anchor — very important)

There are moments in grief when nothing feels manageable except getting through the next breath. This tool is for those times. It does not ask you to reflect, understand, or feel better—only to stay.

  • When grief feels unbearable
  • When you feel depleted, numb, or overwhelmed
  • When effort, insight, or coping feels like too much
  • Do only what feels possible
  • You can stop at any point
  • This tool is about survival, not improvement

1. Lower Your Body’s Tension Slightly
If it feels safe, let your shoulders drop just a little.
If not, simply notice them.


2. Unclench One Small Area
Choose one place—your jaw, hands, or brow.
Let it soften, even by one percent.


3. Focus on the Next Breath Only
You don’t need to think beyond this breath.
Breathe in.
Breathe out.

That is enough.


4. Remind Yourself Gently
Silently say:
“Getting through this moment is enough.”


Closing

Survival is not weakness.
Staying is a form of strength when grief is heavy.

Guided Grief Practices

These practices offer gentle structure when you’re ready to sit with grief a little longer.

Guided Grief Practice #1: Meeting the Part of You That Misses

Grief often lives in the part of us that still reaches for what is no longer there. This practice gently invites awareness of that part—not to fix it or quiet it, but to acknowledge it with steadiness and care.

  • When longing or missing feels especially present
  • When grief feels tender, personal, or quietly persistent
  • When you want connection without analysis or pressure
  • Set aside a few uninterrupted minutes
  • You can sit or lie down—choose what feels supportive
  • You may pause or stop at any time

1. Settle Into the Present Moment
Begin by noticing where your body is supported.
Let your breath move naturally without trying to change it.

Take a few moments here.


2. Notice the Part That Misses
Gently bring attention to the feeling of missing—without attaching it to a story.
You may notice it as an ache, a pull, heaviness, or a quiet presence.

There is no need to define it clearly.


3. Acknowledge Its Experience
Silently say to this part:
“I see that you miss.”

You are not trying to soothe it away—only to recognize that it exists.


4. Offer Gentle Presence
Imagine staying near this part, as you would with someone you care about.
You don’t need to say anything else.
Just allow your presence to be steady and calm.

Breathe here for a few moments.


5. Return Slowly
When you feel ready, gently bring your attention back to the room around you.
Let the feeling remain without carrying it forward intentionally.


Closing

Missing is not a sign of being stuck.
It is a sign that something mattered—and that part of you deserves kindness.

Guided Grief Practice #2: Grief Without Fixing

Grief often triggers an urge to understand, resolve, or make meaning quickly. This practice invites you to sit with grief as it is, without trying to change it, solve it, or move past it.

  • When you feel pressure to “do something” with your grief
  • When fixing or explaining feels exhausting
  • When you want permission to simply be with what’s here
  • Set aside a few quiet minutes
  • You can sit comfortably or lie down
  • There is no outcome to reach

1. Arrive in Your Body
Notice where your body is supported right now.
Feel the weight beneath you without adjusting or correcting anything.

Let yourself arrive.


2. Notice the Urge to Fix
Gently observe any impulse to understand, analyze, or improve how you feel.
You don’t need to stop the impulse—just notice it.


3. Name What’s Here
Silently acknowledge:
“This is grief.”

You don’t need to describe it further or explain why it’s here.


4. Offer Permission
Say quietly to yourself:
“I don’t have to fix this right now.”

Let that sentence land without forcing belief.


5. Stay for a Few Breaths
Remain with the sensation of grief for two or three natural breaths.
If your mind drifts, gently return to the breath or the feeling of support beneath you.


Closing

Grief does not require solutions to be honored.
Sometimes presence is the most compassionate response.

Guided Grief Practice #3: Creating a Safe Pause With Grief

Grief can feel constant, as if there is no break from its presence.
This practice creates a brief, intentional pause—offering your nervous system a moment of safety without pushing grief away.

  • When grief feels nonstop or all-consuming
  • When you need a moment of relief without avoidance
  • When your body feels tense or overwhelmed
  • Set aside a few quiet minutes
  • Choose a position that feels supportive
  • You can return to this practice whenever you need a pause

1. Find a Sense of Support
Notice where your body is being supported right now—by the chair, the floor, or something solid beneath you.
Allow yourself to lean into that support, even slightly.


2. Create a Gentle Boundary
Silently say to yourself:
“For this moment, I am safe enough.”

This is not about denying grief—only creating a pause around it.


3. Breathe Into the Pause
Take one slow breath in.
Let the exhale be natural and unforced.

Repeat this two or three times.


4. Let Grief Wait Nearby
Imagine grief sitting just outside this pause—still present, but not pressing in.
You are not abandoning it. You are resting.


5. Return Gradually
When you feel ready, allow awareness of the room to come back in.
Notice one sound or one sensation around you.


Closing

Pausing does not mean avoiding.
It means giving your system enough safety to continue.

Guided Grief Practice #4: Carrying Love Without Losing Yourself

Grief often holds both love and pain at the same time.
This practice supports you in staying connected to what mattered, while also remaining grounded in who you are now.

  • When love and grief feel tightly intertwined
  • When remembering brings both comfort and pain
  • When you want connection without losing emotional balance
  • Choose a quiet moment when you have a few minutes
  • Sit or lie down in a way that feels steady
  • You can stop or pause whenever you need

1. Ground in the Present
Begin by noticing where your body is supported.
Let your breath move naturally, without trying to deepen or control it.

Take a moment here.


2. Bring Love to Mind Gently
Allow a sense of love connected to your grief to come into awareness.
This may be a feeling, a quality, or a quiet presence—no images or memories are required.

Let it be simple.


3. Notice Where You Are Now
Shift attention briefly to yourself in this moment—your body, your breath, your place in the room.
Notice that you exist here, now, alongside the feeling of love.


4. Hold Both at Once
Silently acknowledge:
“Love can stay, and I can stay too.”

Allow both to coexist without forcing closeness or distance.


5. Return With Care
When you feel ready, gently widen your awareness back to the room.
Let the feeling settle in its own way.


Closing

Carrying love does not require losing yourself.
It is possible to remember and remain.

Deep Dive Worksheets

A gentle reflection on loss, change, and what still exists alongside grief

What Was Lost / What Remains

A gentle reflection on loss, change, and what still exists alongside grief

Life Before / Life After

Making sense of change without forcing closure

Naming the Type of Grief You’re Carrying

Understanding grief beyond loss—and why it feels the way it does

Audio & Visual Support for Grief & Loss

Gentle audio and visual tools to support your nervous system when words feel like too much.

Grounding Audio for Heavy Moments

A gentle audio to help you feel supported when grief feels heavy or overwhelming. There’s nothing you need to do—just listen.

Visual Pause: A Place to Rest

Gentle breathing support for moments when grief feels heavy in the body

Breathing With Grief

A gentle reminder that presence is enough when grief is here

Visual Grounding Portal

A gentle visual space to pause, notice movement, and return to support. You can enter wherever feels right.

Where would you like to begin?

Additional Support

If you’re feeling flooded, return to the Instant Tools for quick support.
If you want structure, try a Guided Practice.
If you want reflection and clarity, choose a Deep Dive Worksheet.

Grief doesn’t require a timeline. These tools are here whenever you need them.

If you feel unsafe or in crisis, reach out to local emergency services or a trusted crisis line.


When You’re Ready

Grief doesn’t require a timeline. You can return to these tools anytime or choose a different kind of support if it feels right.

Return to Instant Tools

Explore Guided Practices

Deep Dive Worksheets

Audio/Visual Tools