We honour the full spectrum of change, loss and grief — there’s no one kind.

A beige and black dog laying on a grassy field with trees and greenery in the background.

Sometimes, strong emotional pain is mistaken for mental illness, when it is actually a natural response to loss, change, or transition. Grief does not only happen after a death. It can also arise when relationships change, identity shifts, plans fall apart, or life no longer feels stable.

These experiences create grief, the human process of feeling what has been lost and slowly adjusting to what is different.

Because grief can look like anxiety or depression, it is often misunderstood or treated as something that is “wrong.” But grief is not an illness to fix. It is a natural process that helps us live with change and make sense of our experiences.

When loss is acknowledged and supported, grief can become a passage rather than just a wound - creating space for understanding, resilience, and a way forward that still holds meaning.

  • Aging brings quiet loss—the gradual letting go of youth, loved ones, and familiar roles. These changes often arrive subtly, reshaping our sense of self through absence and adaptation. Loss in aging is not just about what fades, but about how we evolve in response.

  • The emotional processing of an impending loss before it happens, often seen with terminal illness or expected separations.

  • The distress caused by losing a job, financial stability, or professional direction, which can deeply impact confidence and security.

  • Shared loss over societal tragedies, injustices, or large-scale disruptions, impacting communities and generations.

  • The mourning of lost health, abilities, or independence, leading to an emotional adjustment to new limitations and life changes.

  • When aspirations, expectations, or plans for the future are no longer possible, leading to disappointment and a sense of aimlessness.

  • The pain of losing a sense of belonging, whether through relocation, estrangement, or cultural disconnection.

  • The struggle with displacement, assimilation, or the fading of traditions, leading to a longing for cultural roots.

  • The mourning of who one imagined they would become, often triggered by life shifts or unforeseen changes.

  • When life circumstances, roles, or transformations lead to a disconnect from one's sense of self, triggering uncertainty and a search for meaning.

  • A condition that occurs when the desire for life—the felt sense of being alive—becomes so diminished that death appears appealing and depression settles in as a way of life.

  • We mourn nature because we are part of it. When the Earth is harmed—through fire, flood, extinction, or slow erosion—we feel the rupture in ourselves. Even renewal carries loss, reminding us that creation often follows destruction. Our sorrow speaks to love, connection, and the quiet urgency to protect what sustains us.

  • The profound heartache that comes with the death or separation from a beloved animal companion, often underestimated yet deeply impactful.

  • The pain of losing a romantic partner, friend, or family bond, accompanied by feelings of rejection, loneliness, or nostalgia

  • The destabilising grief that arises when one’s environment or circumstances become unsafe, leading to fear and vulnerability.

  • The sorrow of losing faith in something deeply held, whether spiritual, ideological, or personal.

  • The mourning of a child that was hoped for but never arrived, often accompanied by complex emotions of sorrow and longing.

  • The deep sorrow that follows the death of someone close, often accompanied by feelings of emptiness, longing, and profound emotional shifts.

  • The sorrow of carrying emotional wounds from harm experienced, often entangled with feelings of violation, betrayal, or lost trust.