Individual Session (60 Minutes)
An individual grief work session is a quiet, compassionate space where one person is gently guided through the tender, often messy landscape of loss. It’s a time to name painful feelings, honor memories, and sit with sorrow without hurry or judgment. In the company of a trained listener, you may tell the story of what was lost, sift through regrets and what-ifs, and learn small ways to carry the ache so it becomes part of your life rather than the center of it. Each session holds room for tears, silence, and the occasional soft smile that comes from remembering love—helping grief move from an overwhelming tide to something you can live alongside with more ease.
It provides a focused, confidential space for a person to process loss with the support of a trained grief practioner. Sessions are client-centered and tailored to the individual’s specific situation. They combine holistic and evidence-based emotional support, coping skills, and therapeutic techniques to help the person navigate grief’s practical, physical and emotoial challanges.
What a session typically entails
Assessment and goal-setting: The practitioner begins by understanding the nature of the loss, the person’s current symptoms and functioning, prior coping strategies, support system, medical or psychiatric history, and immediate safety concerns. Together the client and clinician establish short- and longer-term goals.
Safe, empathetic listening: The practitioner provides nonjudgmental presence and validation, allowing the client to tell their story, express feelings (anger, sadness, guilt, relief, confusion), and explore memories at a pace that feels manageable.
Emotional processing: Through conversation and targeted interventions, the session helps the client access and work through painful emotions and avoidant patterns. Techniques may include narrative work, meaning-making exercises, imaginal or memory-based processing, and guided affect regulation.
Coping skills and stabilization: The practioner teaches practical tools to manage acute distress—breathing and grounding techniques, sleep and self-care strategies, daily structure, and techniques to reduce rumination or panic. Plans for coping with anniversaries, triggers, and stressful events are often developed.
Behavior and relationship work: Sessions may address changes in roles, routines, identity, and relationships following loss—helping the client negotiate practical tasks, communicate needs with others, and rebuild social support.
Integration and meaning-making: Over time,Grief work supports reconciling the loss with one’s life story, fostering acceptance, new roles or purposes, and adaptive memories of the person or situation lost.
Safety planning and referrals: If the client shows severe depression, suicidal ideation, substance use, or signs of complicated grief, the practitioner develops a safety plan and may coordinate with medical providers or recommend specialized treatments.
Closure and follow-up planning: As progress is made, sessions focus on consolidating gains, relapse prevention, and planning for future support or booster sessions as needed.
Who it is for
Anyone experiencing the death of a loved one who feels distressed, overwhelmed, or stuck in their grief and wants individualized support.
People facing non-death losses that provoke grief (divorce, job loss, loss of health or abilities, miscarriage, loss of identity or community).
Individuals who prefer one-on-one therapy rather than group settings or who
An individual grief work session is a quiet, compassionate space where one person is gently guided through the tender, often messy landscape of loss. It’s a time to name painful feelings, honor memories, and sit with sorrow without hurry or judgment. In the company of a trained listener, you may tell the story of what was lost, sift through regrets and what-ifs, and learn small ways to carry the ache so it becomes part of your life rather than the center of it. Each session holds room for tears, silence, and the occasional soft smile that comes from remembering love—helping grief move from an overwhelming tide to something you can live alongside with more ease.
It provides a focused, confidential space for a person to process loss with the support of a trained grief practioner. Sessions are client-centered and tailored to the individual’s specific situation. They combine holistic and evidence-based emotional support, coping skills, and therapeutic techniques to help the person navigate grief’s practical, physical and emotoial challanges.
What a session typically entails
Assessment and goal-setting: The practitioner begins by understanding the nature of the loss, the person’s current symptoms and functioning, prior coping strategies, support system, medical or psychiatric history, and immediate safety concerns. Together the client and clinician establish short- and longer-term goals.
Safe, empathetic listening: The practitioner provides nonjudgmental presence and validation, allowing the client to tell their story, express feelings (anger, sadness, guilt, relief, confusion), and explore memories at a pace that feels manageable.
Emotional processing: Through conversation and targeted interventions, the session helps the client access and work through painful emotions and avoidant patterns. Techniques may include narrative work, meaning-making exercises, imaginal or memory-based processing, and guided affect regulation.
Coping skills and stabilization: The practioner teaches practical tools to manage acute distress—breathing and grounding techniques, sleep and self-care strategies, daily structure, and techniques to reduce rumination or panic. Plans for coping with anniversaries, triggers, and stressful events are often developed.
Behavior and relationship work: Sessions may address changes in roles, routines, identity, and relationships following loss—helping the client negotiate practical tasks, communicate needs with others, and rebuild social support.
Integration and meaning-making: Over time,Grief work supports reconciling the loss with one’s life story, fostering acceptance, new roles or purposes, and adaptive memories of the person or situation lost.
Safety planning and referrals: If the client shows severe depression, suicidal ideation, substance use, or signs of complicated grief, the practitioner develops a safety plan and may coordinate with medical providers or recommend specialized treatments.
Closure and follow-up planning: As progress is made, sessions focus on consolidating gains, relapse prevention, and planning for future support or booster sessions as needed.
Who it is for
Anyone experiencing the death of a loved one who feels distressed, overwhelmed, or stuck in their grief and wants individualized support.
People facing non-death losses that provoke grief (divorce, job loss, loss of health or abilities, miscarriage, loss of identity or community).
Individuals who prefer one-on-one therapy rather than group settings or who