FEW EXPERIENCES are more solitary than grief. Each mourner knows the loved one in a different way. No one feels the same pain or can predict when they will feel it. Yet grief is also universal.
It’s almost impossible to know what to say to someone in the throes of grief. We all want to say something comforting. Very few of us know what that is. I’ve learned this the hard way.
The impact of grief can be debilitating, and can also profoundly affect people’s performance at work. With new rights to bereavement leave promised under the Labour government, now is a good time for ...
“We are standing by our grieving families by providing this commemorative document and easing administrative and financial burdens during what is already an extraordinarily difficult time." In the ...
Bereavement benches have been installed to help those grieving in the community. The Felixstowe Friends of St Elizabeth Hospice arranged for plaques to be placed on the four new benches, which ...