Psychology Diary

The First Step Toward Change Is Awareness

  • Home
  • Relationships
  • Mental Health
  • Expert Tips
  • Life
  • Family
  • Marriage

Coping with Grief: Healthy Ways to Navigate the Loss of a Spouse

August 31, 2025 · Marriage

Man walking alone in park during fall

Debunking the “Stages of Grief”: A More Fluid Reality

Many of us are familiar with the concept of the “five stages of grief”: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. This model, developed by psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, has become a cultural shorthand for the grieving process. However, it is important to understand its original context and its limitations.

Dr. Kübler-Ross’s work was groundbreaking, but her observations were based on her work with terminally ill patients processing their own impending death, not with those who were bereaved. While the emotions she identified are certainly part of grief, they are not a neat, linear checklist that everyone must complete in order. Grief is much messier and more unpredictable than a five-step plan.

Modern grief experts now prefer more dynamic models that better capture the true experience of loss. Two helpful ways to think about this are the “Tasks of Mourning” and the “Dual Process Model.”

Worden’s Four Tasks of Mourning

Grief counselor J. William Worden proposed that instead of passive stages we move through, the bereaved have active tasks they must accomplish to adapt to their loss. This framework can feel more empowering because it centers on what you can do.

1. To accept the reality of the loss. This means fully acknowledging, on both an intellectual and emotional level, that your spouse is gone and will not return. It’s a process that takes time and involves confronting the finality of the death.

2. To process the pain of grief. This task involves allowing yourself to feel the painful emotions of grief rather than avoiding or suppressing them. It is the hard, necessary work of mourning.

3. To adjust to a world without the deceased. This happens on multiple levels. There are external adjustments, like learning to manage finances alone or figuring out how to do tasks your partner used to handle. There are internal adjustments, like shifts in your sense of self—from “we” to “I.” And there are spiritual adjustments, which may involve questioning your beliefs about the world.

4. To find an enduring connection with the deceased in the midst of embarking on a new life. This is a pivotal shift from the old idea of “letting go.” The goal is not to forget your partner but to find a new, different way to maintain a connection with their memory as you move forward and reinvest in life.

The Dual Process Model of Coping

Another helpful concept is the Dual Process Model, which suggests that healthy grieving involves an oscillation, or a back-and-forth movement, between two types of stressors.

Loss-Oriented Stressors: These are the activities and feelings directly related to the loss. This includes crying, looking at old photographs, talking about your spouse, and processing the pain of their absence.

Restoration-Oriented Stressors: These are the secondary challenges and tasks that come with adapting to a new life. This includes learning new skills (like cooking or paying bills), building a new daily routine, taking on new roles, and forming new relationships or social connections.

The key insight of this model is that it is healthy and necessary to take a break from the direct pain of grief. Oscillating between confronting the loss and engaging with the tasks of life allows you to grieve without becoming completely overwhelmed by it. It gives you permission to laugh, to learn, to live, even while your heart is broken.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Share this article

Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Latest Posts

  • A mixed-media collage of a fragmented silhouette head with an anchor being cut, symbolizing the loss of one's grip on reality. 10 Signs Someone Is Trying to Distort Your Reality
  • A mixed media collage of a beautiful white flower with hidden barbed wire roots and thorny stems on a textured vintage paper background. 8 Behaviors That Reveal Hidden Toxicity
  • A candid photo of a couple in a dim living room, showing a sense of emotional distance and unspoken tension. 10 Traits That May Reveal Covert Narcissism
  • A couple sits on a sofa in a dimly lit room, one person looking at a phone while the other looks away, capturing a moment of secrecy. 8 Signs Someone May Be Hiding More Than They Admit
  • An ink and watercolor illustration of a human head cracking like stone, with golden light leaking through the fissures. 11 Small Clues That Can Expose a Lie
  • An abstract editorial illustration of a silhouette with a tangled nest of lines inside its head, symbolizing mental confusion. 8 Warning Signs Someone May Be Playing Mind Games
  • A mixed media collage of a silhouette filled with torn paper and translucent layers, symbolizing the invisible nature of emotional neglect. 10 Traits of People Emotionally Neglected as Kids
  • A mixed-media collage showing a rigid, golden silhouette with cracks revealing a soft, watercolor interior, representing performative armor. 7 Behaviors People Mistake For Confidence But Aren’t
  • A woman sits alone at a kitchen table in dim evening light while her partner stands in the background, illustrating emotional distance. 9 Psychological Reasons Why People Stay in Unhappy Relationships
  • An illustration of a person using a prism to turn a chaotic blue wave into a clear spectrum of distinct colors. 10 Signs You Have Exceptionally High Emotional Intelligence

Newsletter

Get the latest posts delivered to your inbox.

Related Articles

19 Efficient Ways to Make Your Divorce As Painless as Possible

The truth is, no one gets married thinking they will end up in a divorce…

Read More →
holiday

17 Disagreements Even Happy Couples Have During The Holidays

During the holidays, everyone wants to spend time with their families and loved ones, exchange…

Read More →

Is Your Spouse a Cheater? 12 Red Flags You Shouldn’t Ignore

While we can’t deny that Americans are divided in many ways, there’s definitely one value…

Read More →

10 Financial Mistakes Newlyweds Should Avoid At All Costs

Marriage means merging your life completely with someone else’s, including your finances. Believe it or…

Read More →

8 Common Reasons Why Couples Fight

Fighting is normal. Friends argue, relatives argue and partners argue too. In every human relationship,…

Read More →
Successful Couple

14 Phrases Successful Couples Use Daily

“You look fantastic!” Receiving regular reminders that your spouse is still attracted to you, even…

Read More →
trust, married marriage

11 Last Attempts Before Giving Up on Your Marriage

Judie and Trevor, both in their late fifties and married for over 20 years, are…

Read More →
Divorce

Divorce: 12 Simple Reasons People Call It Quits

I think we’ve established already that break-ups are very hard, but what about divorce? Well,…

Read More →
Couple in kitchen, gentle touch, morning light.

The 5 Love Languages: How to Understand Your Partner Better After Decades Together

The 5 Love Languages, Revisited for Long-Term Couples Thinking about the five love languages isn’t…

Read More →

Psychology Diary

The First Step Toward Change Is Awareness

Inedit Agency S.R.L.
Bucharest, Romania

contact@psychologydiary.com

Explore

  • About Us
  • Advertiser Disclosure
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Do not sell my personal information
  • Editorial Policy
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Subscribe
  • Unsubscribe

Categories

  • Expert Tips
  • Family
  • Life
  • Marriage
  • Mental Health

© 2026 Psychology Diary. All rights reserved.