Staying Strong as a Couple
in Times of Grief
in Times of Grief
Grief is an overwhelming emotion that will be experienced at one time or another by everyone. When it is experienced by one spouse or partner, it can seriously affect the other. The impact can be so extensive that it can affect your relationship. Grief, especially complicated grief, may leave you both feeling miserable and hopeless.
With counseling, it is possible to manage the challenges of grief. Many couples who have turned to counseling have made it an opportunity for their relationship to grow, bringing them closer together. If you wish to overcome your grief and improve things between you and your partner, it isn’t too late to turn to couples counseling.
The Nature of Grief in a Committed Relationship
Each individual has a unique way of grieving. Whether you are grieving over a breakup, the loss of a loved one, illness, or financial instability, staying strong through grief can be difficult, even for loving couples. It is not uncommon for each partner to expect the other to grieve the same way they do. However, while one may prefer to grieve in private, the other may want to search out new meaning in life.
Opposites often attract, and these differences may enrich or enhance your relationship. Grief, however, can exaggerate your differences to the point of becoming an additional strain. Your ability to face grief as a couple depends on other factors that can influence your responses, including individual personality, previous experiences, the nature of the loss, and your beliefs.
Experiencing grief in your marriage can be physically and emotionally exhausting for both of you. You may lose the energy to care about your relationship. This doesn’t mean, however, that the love is gone. As a grieving couple, know that your marriage can survive and even flourish if both of you have the authentic desire to make your relationship a priority during this trying time.
A Relationship Challenged by Grief
Couples may face many trials during bereavement, including changing routines and staying strong for the rest of the family. It’s important to know that differences in the ways you confront loss are absolutely normal. These differences can, however, lead to challenges in your relationship.
One of the common signs that your relationship is being tested is a growing distance between you and your partner. You may talk less, or if you make an effort to talk, it may just be to blame each other, fueling resentment. Resentment can develop into guilt, making other problems worse.
Heightened emotions may directly affect your physical, emotional, and psychological health. They may also lead to other problems, such as substance abuse as a way of escape, disturbed relationships with children and other family members, and troubled family finances. However, as a couple, stay hopeful, because there are healthy ways to work together to help each other in the midst of these challenges.
Sharing Grief and Staying Strong as a Couple
Grief doesn’t have to drive you apart, even if it is expressed differently. Judging each other’s grief is not supportive or loving. It can be more productive to accept how your partner grieves and not use it as a measure of love. Expressing grief privately does not mean there is less pain or sadness. Unfortunately, this is easier said than done.
There are no rules or guidelines to follow while going through the stages of grief. Nothing can prepare you for the strain on your relationship. There are no quick fixes, and it may take time for you to heal. It can greatly help if you communicate to manage your feelings while respecting each other’s grieving process.
The support of other people can be critical—especially that of a marriage or relationship counselor. Sharing your feelings with a capable therapist can lighten your burden and every intense emotion that comes with it.
Getting Past Grief Together
If you’re experiencing grief and finding it difficult to move on, you may find great benefit in grief counseling, for both of you as a couple and for other members of the family as well. Help is available at Carolina Counseling Services — Sanford, NC. Family counseling for couples can help you manage life-changing events such as a loss.
At CCS, contracted counselors can help you stay strong during grief and strengthen your relationship. Life after losing someone or something significant may never be the same, but in time, you can move forward together. Call now to request an appointment. You can have a new and stronger relationship in the months and years to come.
Related Articles:
- Releasing Yourself from Grief and Trauma with a Counselor
- Grief: Crucial Things You Need to Know
- Getting Help to Bounce Back from Grief and Trauma
- The Healthy Way to Help Children Process Grief
- Protecting Your Marriage Against the Impact of Grief
- Easing Teen Grief with Counseling
- A Child in Grief: Bringing Back The Smile
- Putting an End to Grief
- Grieving and Healing as a Family