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No One Told Me Year Two Might Feel Like This

 

There’s a quiet shift that can happen after the first year of grief.

Not everyone talks about it.
Not everyone expects it.

Because you did the “hard year,” right?

You made it through the firsts—the holidays, the birthdays, the moments that felt impossible at the time. You survived the shock. The early fog. The days that didn’t feel real.

And somewhere along the way, there’s this idea that after year one… it should start to feel easier.

But for many people, it doesn’t.

 

When the Noise Fades

In the beginning, there’s a kind of noise around grief.

People check in.
There are things to do.
Paperwork. Logistics. Decisions you didn’t ask to make.

Even your own body is in protection mode—just trying to get through the day.

But as time passes, that noise quiets.

The messages slow down.
The world keeps moving.
And suddenly, there’s more space.

And in that space, something else can show up:

The realization that your person died.
That this isn’t temporary.
That this is your life now.

 

A Different Kind of Missing

Year two grief doesn’t always look like year one.

It’s not always as loud.
But it can feel deeper.

It’s the kind of missing that shows up in ordinary moments:

  • when something good happens and you don’t know who to tell

  • when something hard happens and you wish they were there to steady you

  • when you realize how many small things they carried that you’re now holding alone

It’s also where new questions begin to surface:

Who am I now?
What does my life look like from here?
Am I allowed to move forward—and what does that even mean?

 

What People Don’t Always See

From the outside, it might look like you’re doing better.

You’re functioning. Showing up. Getting through things.

But inside, you may be carrying:

  • a deeper loneliness

  • a loss of confidence

  • a sense that the future you once imagined no longer exists

These are the quieter layers of grief.
The ones that don’t always get acknowledged.

 

There Is No Timeline

One of the hardest parts of this stage is the expectation—spoken or unspoken—that you should be “okay” by now.

But grief doesn’t follow a calendar.

Missing your person doesn’t expire.
Adjusting to their absence isn’t something you finish.

It’s something you learn to live with, slowly, in your own way.

 

If This Is Where You Are

If year two feels heavier than you expected…
if the quiet feels louder…
if you’re realizing how much has changed—

There is nothing wrong with you.

You are not behind.
You are not doing this incorrectly.

You are continuing to love someone who died.
And learning how to live without them at the same time.

That is not simple work.

 

A Gentle Truth

Grief doesn’t get smaller.

But sometimes, with support, with time, and with connection—it becomes something you can carry differently.

Not all at once.
Not perfectly.

Just… gradually.

 

You Don’t Have to Do This Alone

If this stage of grief feels unfamiliar or heavier than expected, you’re not imagining it.

Grief counselor Jill S. Cohen writes about how many people find the second year especially challenging—when the deeper realities of loss settle in, and support often fades.

If you’re feeling that, you’re not alone in it.

And you don’t have to carry it alone either.

 

Source

Insights inspired by Jill S. Cohen, Family Grief Counselor https://www.jillgriefcounselor.com/blog/your-grief-might-be-harder-after-the-first-year

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