Compassionate Grief Therapy and Bereavement Treatment Plans

Empathetic Support for Loss and Recovery

Posted On : April 25, 2026

Table of Contents

Key Points

Key Points

Grief is more than sadness after a loss. It encompasses a wide range of emotions that come with losing someone or something meaningful. It can include anger, guilt, relief, numbness, and even the unexpected instinct to reach out to someone who is no longer there. These experiences are deeply personal and can be difficult to process without support. But without working through grief, many people find it takes other forms, including substance abuse. 

Unresolved grief is a major driver of addiction, and understanding how the two overlap and how grief therapy supports recovery is essential for anyone who is working through both grief and substance use.

What Is Grief?

Grief is the emotional, psychological, and physical reaction one has to a significant loss.[1] While grief is most commonly associated with the death of a loved one, it can also stem from any loss, including the end of a relationship, loss of identity or role, a disability, miscarriage, estrangement from family members, or a major lifestyle change.[2]

Grieving is not considered a disorder. It is a normal reaction to loss, and for the vast majority of people, it resolves naturally through time and support from others without requiring professional intervention.

However, grief becomes clinically significant and a potential driver of substance use when it gets stuck, and the person experiencing it cannot move forward.[3]

Types of Grief

  • Acute grief — The initial, intense wave of emotional pain, cognitive disruption, and physical distress that follows a significant loss. Acute grief is intense and consuming but usually fades over time.
  • Normal grief — The overall grieving process through which most people adapt to loss over time, coming to terms with the reality and finality of the loss while rebuilding a functioning life. While therapy can be helpful in this stage, normal grief typically does not require formal treatment.
  • Complicated grief — A grief reaction that lasts longer than the normal grieving process and deviates significantly from what is considered a typical response, in terms of intensity, duration, or functional impairment. Complicated grief involves intense, prolonged yearning, difficulty accepting the loss, bitterness or anger that does not fade with time, avoidance of reminders, and significant interference with daily life.
  • Prolonged grief disorder (PGD) — A medical disorder recognized in the DSM-5, defined as experiencing intense grief following the death of a loved one with a significant level of impairment lasting more than 12 months after the death. PGD is a distinct clinical condition that responds to specific evidence-based treatment.
  • Delayed grief — Grief that does not emerge at the time of loss but arises later, sometimes months or years afterward, often triggered by another loss or a significant life transition, creating space for feelings that were suppressed.
  • Traumatic grief — Grief following a sudden, violent, or traumatic loss that can include symptoms of PTSD and requires trauma-informed professional support.

Symptoms of Grief

Grief symptoms extend across emotional, cognitive, physical, and behavioral dimensions. Understanding the full range of grief reactions helps explain why unprocessed grief so often finds expression through substance use.

Emotional symptoms include:

  • Intense sadness and longing for the lost person or thing
  • Anger, either directed at the deceased, at circumstances around the loss, at oneself, or without direction of any kind
  • Guilt and self-blame, often irrational
  • Anxiety and fear regarding the future
  • Numbness and emotional blunting
  • Relief, especially following an uncomfortable death or a relationship that ended poorly; often accompanied by secondary guilt

Physical symptoms of grief include:

  • Fatigue and physical exhaustion
  • Suppressed immunity and an increased chance of being ill
  • Sleep problems, including insomnia or hypersomnia (sleeping too much)
  • Changes in appetite leading to weight loss or weight gain
  • Increased risk of cardiovascular problems, particularly in the period immediately following a major loss
  • Physical soreness and somatic complaints without a clear medical cause

Grief is more than sadness after a loss.

Cognitive symptoms include:

  • Difficulty concentrating and mental fog
  • Intrusive thoughts about the loss
  • Disbelief and difficulty accepting the reality of the loss
  • Preoccupation with memories of the deceased or lost relationship

Behavioral symptoms include:

  • Social withdrawal and isolation
  • Avoiding reminders of the loss
  • Loss of interest in previously meaningful activities
  • In some cases, substance use as a coping strategy

How Unresolved Grief Leads to Substance Abuse

Unresolved grief often can increase vulnerability to mental health conditions and harmful coping behaviors, including substance abuse.[4] 

Many people in substance use disorder treatment have experienced losses, some recently and some years ago, that they are still grieving and have never fully processed. In each of these cases, substance use is not an incidental behavior; rather, it was a way to help cope with pain. At least, initially.

Grieving creates very high levels of emotional pain, and most people do not feel prepared to handle that pain, particularly in cultures where it is not permissible to grieve openly or where support systems are underdeveloped. Turning to substance is a way to cope. Alcohol numbs the pain. Opioids quiet the unbearable yearning. Cannabis takes the edge off the intrusive thoughts. In each case, the substance provides relief from grief reactions that feel intolerable. But in doing so, it interrupts the natural grieving process, preventing the emotional work of adapting to the loss.

Delayed grief is particularly relevant in addiction contexts.[5] Many people suppress their grief at the time of the loss and continue to function, only for their unprocessed grief to manifest later as depression, anxiety, or an intensification of substance abuse that appears to have no link to the initial loss. In early recovery, when substance use is stopped, and the person no longer has their primary physiological or emotional tool to cope with the acute emotional pain of the loss, all of the previously unresolved grief will emerge with significant intensity.

Creating an effective grief treatment plan in early recovery must identify the connection between substance use and grief. If a person does not process their grief while being treated for addiction, there is a strong chance they will return to the same behaviors and continue to use substances.

The Stages of Grief and Beyond

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s five stages of grief — denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance — remains one of the most widely recognized frameworks for understanding the grieving process.[6] 

However, grief research has moved beyond the stage model, recognizing that grief does not occur linearly; the five stages represent typical behaviors experienced throughout the grieving process rather than a defined sequence.

The dual process model, introduced by Stroebe and Schut, is a more broadly applicable model for working with grieving clients: people in grief move between two coping types — loss-oriented grief (actively dealing with and resolving the grieving process) and restoration-oriented grief (addressing practical needs while creating a new life).[7] Healthy grief requires moving between both rather than staying in one or the other. This model is especially important in addiction treatment, as the client must simultaneously grieve and rebuild a new life in recovery.

Evidence-Based Grief Treatment

Complicated Grief Therapy (CGT): Complicated grief therapy (CGT), developed by Katherine Shear at Columbia University, is the gold standard treatment for complicated grief and prolonged grief disorder.[8] CGT integrates cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational interviewing with techniques specifically designed to treat the symptoms of complicated grief, including imagined conversations with the deceased, revisiting the events surrounding the death, and overcoming the barriers to adaptation that distinguish complicated from normal grief. Multiple clinical trials published in JAMA demonstrate that CGT is significantly more effective than standard interpersonal therapy as a treatment for complicated grief.[9]

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): CBT for grief focuses on the negative thoughts, cognitive distortions, and avoidance behaviors that continue to feed complicated grief and depression. Cognitive restructuring addresses the self-blame, feelings of guilt, and catastrophic thinking that many people experience while grieving, while behavioral activation gradually re-engages them in meaningful activities.

Traumatic Grief Therapy: For those whose grief involves a traumatic loss, trauma-focused approaches such as EMDR and prolonged exposure therapy are used in conjunction with grief-specific treatments to address both the traumatic and loss-related components of the experience.

Grief Support Groups: Peer support in grief is one of the most powerful forms of therapeutic intervention available. It provides a shared experience of being heard by others who have also experienced loss, reduces feelings of isolation, and creates a community that grief typically destroys. Grief support groups have been incorporated into group therapy programming at All In Solutions.

Our Commitment to Accuracy and Integrity

All content on this website has been developed and reviewed by licensed clinicians, certified addiction counselors, and experienced professionals in the field. All sources of information used to develop our content are peer-reviewed studies and recognized medical associations like SAMHSA, NIDA, and the CDC. All content is written in person-first, stigma-free language.
Our goal is to give individuals and families reliable, accurate information in order to help them make informed decisions on their path to recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions About Grief Therapy

What is the difference between normal grief and complicated grief?

Normal grief follows a natural process of gradually learning to adapt to and live with your loss, which reduces in intensity over time. In contrast, complicated grief follows a non-linear process with prolonged periods of continued overwhelming feelings of loss, resulting in significant restrictions to daily functioning. Complicated grief will not resolve on its own and instead responds favorably to appropriate, evidence-based treatments, including Complicated Grief Therapy (CGT).

Physical symptoms of grief include fatigue, decreased immunity, sleep disruption, changes in appetite, cardiovascular issues, and chronic unexplained physical pain. Grief is more than just an emotional experience — it produces observable physiological changes within the body, and is another significant reason to seek clinical support.

Complicated grief therapy (CGT), developed by Katherine Shear, has been demonstrated to be the gold-standard evidence-based treatment for complicated grief and prolonged grief disorder through clinical trials published in JAMA. CBT, trauma-focused therapies, and grief support groups are also important components of comprehensive treatment for complicated grief.

Unresolved grief produces extreme, prolonged emotional distress; as a result, many people cope with their overwhelming emotional pain by using drugs or alcohol as a means of self-medicating. This impairs the natural grieving process by providing pain relief while avoiding the underlying cause of the pain, maintaining both the grief and the addiction.

The dual process model of grief defines healthy grief as an oscillation between loss-oriented coping (actively processing your grief) and restoration-oriented coping (addressing the practical and identity-related challenges of rebuilding after loss). Rather than a linear path through stages, the dual process model indicates ongoing movement between both types of coping to process the grief and find a way forward.

Co-Occurring Mental Health Conditions We Treat

Grief Treatment at All in Solutions

At All In Solutions, grief is treated as a significant clinical issue within the larger context of dual diagnosis addiction treatment. Browse our locations and contact us to get started with a customized treatment plan.

All In Solutions wellness Center

West Palm Beach, FL

All In Solutions Counseling Center

Boynton Beach, FL

All In Solutions Cherry Hill

Cherry Hill, NJ

All In Solutions Detox

Simi Valley, CA

All In Solutions California

Simi Valley, CA

All In Solutions Detox Reseda

No matter which location you choose, you will receive the same level of accredited and compassionate care.

You Don't Have to Carry This Alone

Grief is not something to get over, numb, or run away from. Rather, it is a journey to be traveled with an appropriate level of clinical support, therapeutic relationships, and peer community. If you are ready to take the first step, reach out today. Our admissions team is available to help you or your loved one find the support you need.

[1] [2] Casarett, D., Kutner, J. S., & Abrahm, J. (2001). Life after death: A practical approach to grief and bereavement. Annals of Internal Medicine, 134(3), 208–215. https://www.acponline.org/sites/default/files/documents/clinical_information/resources/end_of_life_care/lifeafterdeath.pdf

[3] Lenferink, L. I. M., & Boelen, P. A. (2019). Traumatic loss: Mental health consequences and implications for intervention. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 10(1), Article 1591331. https://doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2019.1591331

[4] Seiler, A., & von Känel, R., & Slavich, G. M. (2020). The psychobiology of bereavement and health: A conceptual review from the perspective of social signal transduction theory of depression. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.565239

[5] [6] Maciejewski, P. K., Zhang, B., Block, S. D., & Prigerson, H. G. (2007). An empirical examination of the stage theory of grief. JAMA, 297(7), 716–723. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.297.7.716

[7] Stroebe, M., & Schut, H. (1999). The dual process model of coping with bereavement: Rationale and description. Death Studies, 23(3), 197–224.

https://danieldirect.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Stroebe-Schut-Dual-Process.pdf

[8] Srivastava, T., Lee, K., Ehrenkranz, R., Cozzolino, P. J., Wise, F. A., Burns, M., McCormick, T., Yaden, D., Agrawal, M., & Penberthy, J. K. (2025). The efficacy of psychotherapeutic interventions for prolonged grief disorder: A systematic review. Journal of Affective Disorders, 380, 561–575. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2025.03.173

[9] Shear, M. K., et al. (2005). Treatment of complicated grief: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 293(21), 2601–2608. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.293.21.2601