The After the After
That first year, you’re mostly numb.
You’re just doing what you’re supposed to—making it through holidays, paperwork, phone calls, trying to sleep, trying to eat.
You move through it like a checklist, one hard day at a time.
You think if you could just get through all the firsts, maybe it’ll start to hurt less.
Then the second-year hits, and the shock starts to fade.
You’re no longer running on adrenaline.
The finality of it starts to sink in.
You realize this isn’t just a bad dream you’ll wake up from. This is your life now.
But by now people have moved on.
They think you have too.
They don’t realize this is when you start to really feel it.
The support fades, the check-ins stop, and you start to understand how alone grief can make you feel.
After a while, it’s clear life keeps moving without you.
People are planning, laughing, living—and you’re still trying to figure out where you fit in now.
Nothing feels the same, no matter how much you try to make it.
And in this moment,
you stop waiting to feel like yourself again.
You just start learning how to live as who you are now.
This is the after the after.




I love this and can relate to it so much, given the losses, I’ve experienced the past few years. How dare the world just keep turning and television shows keep streaming and data keep processing, when someone who was so much a part of our lives has permanently vanished? Really, all of nature should grind to a halt and pause long enough to weep with us, to acknowledge the loss. 🙏❤️