AI Money Machine
A complete 30-day step-by-step system for entrepreneurs, freelancers, and job seekers to b…
A guide for when life gets hard
When someone you love dies — a compassionate guide through the first year and beyond.
Bereavement is one of the most universal and most isolating experiences a person can face. No matter how many others have lost someone they love, this loss is yours — specific, irreplaceable, singular. The pain does not mean you are broken. It means you loved.
The books in this collection have been chosen for their capacity to accompany rather than advise — to sit beside you in the dark, and to offer, gently, the wisdom of those who have walked this path before.
Your recovery pathway
Five science-backed stages from crisis to thriving
Every title below has been chosen because it speaks directly to where you are right now — and where you are going.
A complete 30-day step-by-step system for entrepreneurs, freelancers, and job seekers to b…
A 21-day, body-first somatic workbook for resetting an exhausted nervous system. Grounded …
The rebuilt self is not a return to who you were before — it is something more honest, mor…
Personalised guidance
The free 5-minute Strong Through Change Assessment reveals exactly which stage of the framework you're in right now — and gives you a tailored reading path to help you move forward.
The first year after bereavement is marked by milestones, firsts, and a grief that intensifies before it eases. Here is what to expect and what actually helps.
Read the full article →You're not the first to feel this way — and you won't be the last. Here are honest answers to the questions we hear most.
Get personalised guidance →It's popular but widely misunderstood. Kübler-Ross's stages (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance) were originally observed in the terminally ill, not the bereaved. Grief is not linear or predictable. You don't "complete" stages or grieve in the "right" order. More modern models like "continuing bonds" are often more helpful.
Complicated (or prolonged) grief occurs when acute grief symptoms persist intensely for more than a year and significantly impair daily functioning. It is different from depression, though the two can co-occur. It is treatable — specific therapies (like Complicated Grief Treatment) have strong evidence.
Show up, and keep showing up — long after the funeral when others have gone quiet. Say the name of the person who died. Don't try to fix the pain or offer silver linings. Ask what they need. Practical help (meals, errands) often means more than words.
Yes, particularly after a long illness or a difficult relationship. Relief does not diminish love. It is one of many valid, simultaneous feelings in the enormous complexity of grief. Many people feel shame about relief — which makes it important to name it as normal.