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Have you ever walked into a family gathering and felt completely unseen in your grief?
Maybe someone said something that stung, or maybe no one said anything at all.
You look around and think, Do they even remember? What do you do when your family doesn’t understand your grief?
Thanksgiving is quickly approaching, and I want to help you carry a mindset that protects your peace without shutting down your heart.
If this season already feels heavy for you, you’re not alone. The pressure begins to rise before you even step into the room—trying to honor your loved one, manage holiday gatherings, and somehow keep everyone else comfortable. It’s a lot for one heart to hold.
There’s a moment every grieving parent knows too well: walking into a space where life keeps moving for everyone else, while your heart feels like it froze in time. And if family doesn’t understand your grief—or doesn’t acknowledge it at all—it can make the room feel even more overwhelming.
Today I want to help you walk into those moments differently… not hardened, not shut down, but steady and covered in peace.
Friends, I know how heavy this time of year can feel.
The pressure starts to build almost without warning—trying to come up with a plan that settles your heart, wanting to honor your loved one, trying to manage gatherings, and navigating family and extended family. It can feel completely overwhelming.
You’re already carrying so much.
You’re holding memories, missing your child, trying to brace for the empty chair, replaying conversations in your mind, and wondering how others will respond this year.
And on top of that, you’re expected to show up, smile, contribute, participate, be okay.
It’s too much pressure for one hurting heart.
And then you step into a space where life keeps moving for everyone else—
and it feels like your heart is standing still.
That weight alone can make you dread the holidays before they even begin.
You want to walk in with peace, but something inside you tightens, wondering how your grief will be received… or if it will be received at all.
This is where family grief becomes one of the hardest parts of the season.
And this is where I want to meet you today—with truth, with hope, and with real tools to carry you through.
If you’ve listened to me for a while, you know how strongly I feel about biblical boundaries.
Part of the reason is because I didn’t have any until my child died. When grief entered my life, I had to dig deep into God’s Word to understand what boundaries look like, why they matter, and how they protect our hearts.
But there’s another side of boundaries we don’t talk about as often: grace.
Grace doesn’t mean you stay silent.
It doesn’t mean you endure comments that wound your heart.
Grace simply means you choose not to let bitterness take root.
Boundaries and grace were always meant to work together.
Boundaries help you protect your heart so you can show up with peace instead of resentment. Sometimes that looks like saying:
“I appreciate your concern, but I’m not ready to talk about that right now.”
or
“This holiday looks very different for me. Thank you for giving me space to process it.”
Simple statements with sacred protection.
They gently remind others that your grief is holy ground—something they can honor even if they don’t understand.
And friend… you don’t have to say yes to every gathering.
You can choose the spaces that feel safe.
You can leave early.
You can protect your heart without apology.
Setting boundaries doesn’t make you unloving.
It makes you wise.
And grace keeps your heart protected while you do it.
We long for understanding because we want someone to get it.
But the truth is, sometimes they can’t.
And the deeper truth?
You don’t need their understanding to validate your grief.
Psalm 34:18 (NLT) says:
“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted;
He rescues those whose spirits are crushed.”
You are brokenhearted.
Your spirit feels crushed.
And the Lord is close to you.
Your healing won’t come through someone else’s insight, validation, or sensitivity.
It comes from God meeting you right in the middle of your pain.
He sees every tear, every sigh, and every moment when the room feels too loud for your grieving heart.
Even if they don’t get it…
Jesus does.
This might be the hardest one.
We want our family to remember.
We want them to say their name.
We want them to read between the lines and understand what we need.
But friend… sometimes those expectations will crush you more than the silence ever could.
Peace begins when you let go of the need for others to respond a certain way.
Not just releasing your expectations of them—
but releasing their expectations of you.
Colossians 3:15 (NLT) says:
“And let the peace that comes from Christ rule in your hearts.”
Let peace rule.
Give it permission.
Make space for it.
You can still love your family deeply
and accept that they may never fully understand your pain.
And that’s okay—because Jesus does.
For the full conversation and the heart behind these truths,
🎧 listen to Episode 230 of The Grief Mentor Podcast:
“Family Doesn’t Get Your Grief? 3 Truths to Help You Through the Holidays.”
Friend, if your heart feels especially heavy as the holidays approach, I want to help you find peace in the middle of it.
🎁 Holiday Flash Offer — Peace for the Holidays
Extended through December 15th, book a 1:1 Grief Mentor Session and receive my new printable guide:
Peace for the Holidays — A Simple Plan for Grieving Moms.
In our time together, we’ll talk about what this season brings up for you and create a plan that helps you breathe again—one that honors your child and makes space for peace.
👉 Book your session here
💛 Join the Waitlist for The Grief Roadmap
If your heart is whispering that you need community, you’re not alone.
The next round of The Grief Roadmap opens after the first of the year, and the waitlist is now open for both new and returning moms.
When you join, you’ll be the first to know when enrollment begins—and you’ll receive early-access bonuses before the doors open.
👉 Join the waitlist here
You don’t have to face the next season alone. God is already walking with you, and I’d be honored to walk beside you too.


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