Grief Support and Remembrance - Memorial Keepsakes — Grief journey

How Grief Affects Mental Health, Mind and Body

Posted by kerry dibble on

How Grief Affects Mental Health, Mind and Body

When people talk about mental health, grief is often left out of the conversation. But loss can affect every part of us;  emotionally, mentally and physically....

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Life After the Loss of a Baby or Child: Navigating Grief One Day at a Time

Posted by kerry dibble on

Life After the Loss of a Baby or Child: Navigating Grief One Day at a Time

Losing a baby or child changes everything. The world keeps moving, but yours feels like it has stopped. There’s no roadmap for this kind of grief, no timeline to follow, and no “right” way to carry it. Life after loss isn’t about moving on. It’s about learning how to move forward while holding your child close in your heart.

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National Scream Day (April 24th): Why Screaming Can Help You Through Grief

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National Scream Day (April 24th): Why Screaming Can Help You Through Grief

Grief doesn’t always look like quiet tears and soft reflection. Sometimes it’s loud. Sometimes it’s overwhelming. And sometimes, it needs to come out as a scream. If you’re grieving, that urge to scream isn’t something to ignore or feel embarrassed about. It’s your body asking for a way through.

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Why Bank Holidays Can Feel So Hard When You’re Grieving (And How to Get Through Them)

Posted by kerry dibble on

Why Bank Holidays Can Feel So Hard When You’re Grieving (And How to Get Through Them)

Bank holidays are meant to be a break. A pause from normal life. Time to relax, spend time with loved ones, and enjoy a slower pace.

But when you’re grieving, that slower pace can feel very different....

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The 3 C’s of Grief: Gentle Reminders for the Hard Days

Posted by kerry dibble on

The 3 C’s of Grief: Gentle Reminders for the Hard Days

Grief can feel overwhelming, confusing, and deeply isolating. One moment you might feel calm, the next moment completely undone by a memory, a smell, or a song. Many people worry they’re “doing grief wrong” because their experience doesn’t match what others expect....

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