Explore the latest books of this year!
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Alan Wolfelt

    Understanding Your Grief After a Drug-Overdose Death
    Expected Loss: Coping with Anticipatory Grief
    If You're Lonely: Finding Your Way
    365 Days of Understanding Your Grief
    When Grief Is Complicated: A Model for Therapists to Understand, Identify, and Companion Grievers Lost in the Wilderness of Complicated Grief
    Too Much Loss: Coping with Grief Overload
    • 2023

      After a significant loss, it's common to feel like we're going crazy. The sudden absence of someone we love is not only devastating, it's disorienting. They were here one moment, and now they're...gone? Forever? How can that be? The first year or two of grief is often unbelievably painful and confusing. We're in shock, often for weeks or months. Time seems out of whack. We feel powerless, helpless, and ineffective. We can't think straight; we can't get anything done. Our moods swing wildly, and we say and do crazy things. We cry, and we cling to objects that belonged to the person who died. We have bizarre dreams. We think we hear, see, or experience communications from the person who died. We wonder if we can (or should) go on. And through it all, our minds and hearts return over and over again to the impossible reality that can never again talk to or touch a person who lived and breathed and gave our lives so much meaning. There is nothing more challenging than the early months and years of a major life loss. But this compassionate book, by one of the world's most beloved grief counselors, will help you endure and thrive.

      You're Not Crazy--You're Grieving:: 6 Steps for Surviving Loss
    • 2021

      If someone you love died by homicide, your grief is naturally traumatic and complicated. Not only might your grief journey be intertwined with painful criminal justice proceedings, you may also struggle with understandably intense rage, regret, and despair. It's natural for homicide survivors to focus on the particular circumstances of the death as well. Whether your loved one's death was caused by murder or manslaughter, this compassionate guide will help you understand and cope with your difficult grief. It offers suggestions for reconciling yourself to the death on your own terms and finding healing ways for you and your family to mourn. After a homicide death, there is help for those left behind, and there is hope. This book will help see you through.

      Grief After Homicide: Surviving, Mourning, Reconciling
    • 2021

      If You're Lonely: Finding Your Way

      • 56 pages
      • 2 hours of reading

      Ironically, if you are lonely, you’re not alone. People the world over are experiencing an epidemic of loneliness. In the US, one in five of us reports feeling lonely, and almost half of seniors are lonely on a regular basis. Loneliness hurts, and it can lead to depression, addiction, physical problems, and other harmful consequences. This compassionate guide offers a variety of practical suggestions for reclaiming community and building meaningful connections in ways that suit you. Finding your way back to companionship and hope is not only possible, it’s essential. You deserve to feel better. You deserve connection. This book will help you find your way.

      If You're Lonely: Finding Your Way
    • 2021

      When we're grieving, we need relief from our pain. Today we often turn to technology for distraction when what we really need is the opposite: generous doses of nature. Studies show that time spent outdoors lowers blood pressure, eases depression and anxiety, bolsters the immune system, lessens stress, and even makes us more compassionate. This guide to the tonic of nature explores why engaging with the natural world is so effective at helping reconcile grief. It also offers suggestions for bringing short bursts of nature time (indoors and outdoors) into your everyday life as well as tips for actively mourning in nature. This book is your shortcut to hope and healing...the natural way.

      Nature Heals: Reconciling Your Grief Through Engaging with the Natural World
    • 2021

      365 Days of Understanding Your Grief

      • 384 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      4.3(10)Add rating

      After a significant loss, grief is an everyday experience. Bit by bit, these one-page-a-day readings will help you feel supported and muster the courage and hope you need to make it through the day. Whether you’re choosing this book as a follow-up to Understanding Your Grief or as a way to engage with the teachings in a different format, you’ll find a combination of classic content mixed with new ideas and insights. Reading just one page each day will help you sustain hope and heal your heart.

      365 Days of Understanding Your Grief
    • 2021

      We don’t only experience grief after a loss—we often experience it before. If someone we love is seriously ill, or if we’re concerned about upcoming hardships of any kind, we naturally begin to grieve right now. This process of anticipatory grief is normal, but it can also be confusing and painful. Life is change, and change is hard. This book will help see you through.

      Expected Loss: Coping with Anticipatory Grief
    • 2021

      "When someone you care about has suffered the death of a loved one or another significant loss, you want to let them know you care. But it can be hard to know what to say to them or to write in a sympathy note. This handy book offers tips for how to talk or write to a grieving person to convey your genuine concern and support. What to say, what not to say, sympathy card etiquette, how to keep in touch, and more are covered in this concise guide written by one of the world's most beloved grief counselors"-- Provided by publisher

      Sympathy & Condolences: What to Say and Write to Convey Your Support After a Loss
    • 2020

      Loss is always hard, but when someone you love dies of an accidental drug overdose, the grief that follows can be especially painful and challenging. Readers will learn ideas for coping in the early days after the tragic death, as well as ways to transcend the stigma associated with overdose deaths. The book also explores common thoughts and feelings, the six needs of mourning, self-care essentials, finding hope, and more. Understanding Your Grief After A Drug-Overdose Death is part of Companion Press's Words of Hope and Healing series--empathetic books on grief and other loss-related topics, with just the right amount of education and support.

      Understanding Your Grief After a Drug-Overdose Death
    • 2020

      The Grief of Infertility

      • 56 pages
      • 2 hours of reading

      When you want to have a baby but are struggling with fertility challenges, it's normal to experience a range and mixture of ever-changing feelings. These feelings are a natural and necessary form of grief. Whether you continue to hope to give birth or you've stopped pursuing pregnancy, this compassionate guide will help you affirm and express your feelings about infertility. Tips for both women and men are included.

      The Grief of Infertility
    • 2020

      Grief overload is what you feel when you experience too many significant losses all at once, in a relatively short period of time, or cumulatively. In addition to the deaths of loved ones, such losses can also include divorce, estrangement, illness, relocation, job changes, and more. Our minds and hearts have enough trouble coping with a single loss, so when the losses pile up, the grief often seems especially chaotic and defeating. The good news is that through intentional, active mourning, you can and will find your way back to hope and healing. This compassionate guide will show you how.

      Too Much Loss: Coping with Grief Overload