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Grief & Healing

The Truth About the ‘6 Stages of Grief’: Why Healing Isn’t Linear

By Dr. Michael Reeves
7 min readAug 20, 2025
The Truth About the ‘6 Stages of Grief’: Why Healing Isn’t Linear

“For years, people have been told that grief comes in six neat stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance, and finding meaning. But here’s the truth—grief doesn’t follow stages. It’s not a straight line. It’s messy, unpredictable, and deeply personal,” says Dr. Michael Reeves, a psychologist specializing in grief and loss.

The “6 stages of grief” model, originally based on work by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, was never meant to be a strict roadmap for loss. Yet, decades later, it’s still treated as if everyone must go through each stage in order to heal.

Symbolic image of broken stages of grief
Grief doesn’t follow stages—it flows, shifts, and often circles back

The Problem with the ‘Stages of Grief’ Model

While the model was groundbreaking at the time, it oversimplified something profoundly complex.

“Many of my clients tell me, ‘I thought I was grieving wrong because I wasn’t following the stages.’ This belief often makes people feel broken—when in reality, their grief is unfolding exactly as it should,” explains Dr. Reeves.

Here’s why the model doesn’t hold up:

  • People may skip stages entirely
  • Some stages may repeat over and over
  • Feelings often blend together rather than appearing separately
  • Grief can intensify again years later
  • There is no final stage—grief changes, but it doesn’t vanish

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What Grief Really Feels Like

Instead of clean stages, grief is more like an unpredictable storm.

Some days bring relief, others bring overwhelming sorrow. A song, a smell, or a memory can send waves of grief crashing back years after a loss.

Common truths about grief:

  • It comes in waves, not stages
  • You may feel numbness and pain at the same time
  • Joy and sorrow can coexist
  • Healing doesn’t mean forgetting—it means finding ways to carry the love and the loss
Ocean waves symbolizing the ups and downs of grief
Grief often comes in waves—sometimes gentle, sometimes overwhelming

Why Oversimplification Hurts

When people are told there are six stages, they often think:

  • “Why am I not in the next stage yet?”
  • “Why do I keep going backward?”
  • “Why does it feel like I’ll never reach acceptance?”

“These expectations make grief even harder,” says Dr. Reeves. “They create shame, guilt, and the sense that something is wrong with you. But nothing is wrong—grief is simply not linear.”

A More Compassionate Approach to Grief

Instead of strict stages, grief is better understood as a continuum of experiences that ebb and flow. Healing comes not from following steps, but from:

  • Allowing emotions to rise and fall naturally
  • Finding safe ways to express sorrow and longing
  • Creating personal rituals to honor the loved one
  • Receiving gentle, consistent support along the way

This is where new tools like Calmio make a difference.

How Calmio Helps When Stages Fall Short

Calmio doesn’t tell you what “stage” you should be in. Instead, it offers:

  • Daily reflections to process emotions in the moment
  • Personalized journaling prompts to honor your loved one
  • Gentle exercises to reintroduce balance and meaning
  • A supportive space you can return to anytime, without judgment
Gentle AI grief support companion on a mobile device
Calmio meets you where you are—not where a stage says you should be

Real Voices from the Journey

People using Calmio often share similar relief:

  • “I finally realized I wasn’t grieving wrong—there was nothing wrong with me.”
  • “Instead of trying to ‘move on,’ Calmio helped me move forward while carrying my loved one with me.”
  • “It feels like having a gentle companion who understands that grief is complicated.”

Find Your Own Path Through Grief

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Comments (3)

Emily T.

Aug 21, 2025, 9:10 AM

I always felt guilty for not going through the 'stages' the way people said I should. This article was such a relief—it made me realize my grief isn’t wrong, just different.

James K.

Aug 21, 2025, 12:45 PM

The part about grief coming in waves hit me hard. I lost my brother three years ago and sometimes it feels like day one all over again. Thank you for explaining that this is normal.

Dr. Laura S.

Aug 20, 2025, 6:20 PM

As a therapist, I deeply appreciate this perspective. Oversimplified 'stages' often cause more harm than good. This article explains the reality of grief with compassion and clarity.

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grieflosshealingmental-health

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