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Grief and loss

Grief for Who You Were

There is a form of grief that has no grave and no ceremony: the grief for a former self. The person you were before your health changed. Before the relationship ended. Before the career collapsed. Before you realised that certain possibilities had quietly closed. That self is gone, and nobody around you is mourning them, and sometimes that makes the loss harder to carry.

Why this grief is hard to name

Grief for a former self does not fit conventional frameworks. You are not dead. There is no loss event that people around you recognise. And yet something real is gone: the version of you that had certain capacities, certain hopes, a certain relationship to the future. After chronic illness, that self may be gone permanently. After a life-altering event, the before-self can feel like a stranger you loved and cannot return to.

This kind of grief often comes mixed with guilt — because you are still here, still functioning, and it can feel wrong to mourn yourself. But the loss is real, and carrying it alone, without it being named or witnessed, makes it heavier.

What actually helps

Having the loss witnessed — not fixed, not reframed, just acknowledged. Speaking about who you were and what changed, to someone who listens without needing you to be better or over it. Anonymous voice conversation gives you that space. Mindfuse connects you with real people by voice, anonymously, at any hour. First conversation free.

Talk to someone who gets it

Real strangers, anonymous voice. No performance, no profile, no algorithm.

One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android

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