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Complicated Grief — When Mourning Does Not End the Way Everyone Expects | Bharosa

Her son died in a road accident four years ago. He was twenty-three. In the first year, everyone around her was gentle and patient. In the second year, family members began to say things like, you need to move on. In the third year, they stopped saying it because nothing had changed, and they did not know what else to say. In the fourth year, she still wakes up every morning thinking about him for the first ten minutes. She still sets aside his favourite plate at festivals. She still cannot bring herself to enter his room. She still cries most days, though she has learned to do it quietly so nobody hears. She cannot imagine ever feeling better. She believes this is what love looks like — grief that never ends. But she is also exhausted, depressed, and unable to live in the present at all. What she has is not ordinary grief. It is a specific clinical condition called prolonged grief disorder, and it is now recognised by international psychiatric bodies as a distinct condition that needs specialised treatment.

If you or someone you love is stuck in grief that does not soften the way people say it should, please read this blog. At Bharosa, we see prolonged grief every week in our LB Nagar OPD. We want to say something important. There is nothing shameful or wrong about grief that lasts longer or cuts deeper than expected. But when grief gets stuck in ways that prevent healing and life, specialised help can make a profound difference. Love for the person who died is not measured by how much you suffer. Healing does not mean forgetting. These are two of the most important messages we can share.

What Complicated Grief Actually Is

Grief is a normal response to losing someone we love. Most people experience intense sorrow, longing, sleep changes, loss of appetite, and difficulty concentrating in the first weeks and months after a major loss. Over time, for most people, the intensity slowly reduces, even though the sense of loss never fully disappears. People find their way back to life. They continue to miss the person, but the grief becomes less consuming. This is the natural course of grief.

In some people, this natural process gets stuck. The grief does not soften. Months and then years pass, and the person remains in a state of intense mourning, unable to move forward. They may feel disconnected from everything that used to matter to them. They may be unable to accept the loss, even intellectually. They may be consumed by longing, by bitterness, by guilt, by regret. They may feel that life has lost its meaning and that they will never feel normal again. This is what mental health professionals now call prolonged grief disorder or complicated grief.

The American Psychiatric Association formally added prolonged grief disorder to its diagnostic manual in 2022, recognising it as a distinct clinical condition. The World Health Organization has included it in the ICD-11. Harvard Medical School has published extensive research on the neurobiology of complicated grief and its specific treatment. These formal recognitions reflect decades of clinical work showing that prolonged grief is different from ordinary grief and responds to different, specialised approaches.

What Prolonged Grief Looks Like

Persistent intense longing for the deceased person that dominates daily life, at least a year after the death (shorter periods can be considered in children or in certain contexts).

Preoccupation with thoughts and memories of the deceased to a degree that interferes with current life.

Difficulty accepting the death or feeling that part of oneself has died along with the person.

Avoidance of reminders that the person is gone, or conversely, excessive focus on reminders.

Intense emotional pain, such as sadness, guilt, anger, or bitterness, related to the death.

Difficulty engaging with friends, activities, or plans for the future.

Feeling emotionally numb or disconnected.

Feeling that life is meaningless without the person.

Loneliness that feels profound even when surrounded by others.

These features, persisting for at least a year and causing significant distress or impairment, point to prolonged grief disorder. The time threshold is not exact — some people with clear symptoms before a full year still benefit from care, and cultural context matters.

Why Some People Develop Prolonged Grief

Prolonged grief is more likely after certain types of loss. Sudden or violent deaths — accidents, suicides, homicides, natural disasters — carry higher risk. Loss of a child at any age is particularly likely to produce complicated grief, as is loss of a spouse. Losses that involve unresolved relationships or unfinished conversations are harder to integrate. Losses that happen in the context of other ongoing stress or trauma are more likely to become stuck.

Individual factors also matter. People with pre-existing depression or anxiety are at higher risk. People with histories of trauma or multiple losses are more vulnerable. Social isolation and lack of support after the loss contribute. A tendency toward avoidance of painful emotions can prevent the grief from being processed.

None of these factors mean that you failed at grief. Prolonged grief is not a character flaw or a sign of weakness. It is a recognisable pattern that develops under specific circumstances, and it responds to specific treatments. The same love that makes the loss devastating can also fuel the motivation to seek help and heal.

Why It Is Different From Depression

Prolonged grief and depression overlap significantly but are not the same condition. Depression involves pervasive low mood, loss of interest in almost everything, and often a sense of self-worthlessness. Prolonged grief is more focused on the loss itself — the longing for the deceased person, the inability to accept the loss, the preoccupation with memories. A person with prolonged grief may still have capacity for positive feelings in contexts unrelated to the loss, while a person with depression typically has lost this capacity broadly.

That said, depression frequently occurs alongside prolonged grief, and the two conditions often need to be treated together. Treating depression alone without addressing the specific grief patterns usually does not resolve the mourning. Specific grief-focused treatment is needed.

How Complicated Grief Is Treated

Grief-specific therapies have been developed for prolonged grief disorder. One of the best-studied is Complicated Grief Treatment (CGT), developed by grief researcher Dr. Katherine Shear and colleagues. It is a structured, time-limited therapy that addresses both the grief itself and the patterns that are keeping it stuck — things like avoidance of reminders, difficulty imagining a future, and unresolved issues in the relationship. Research shows that CGT can produce significant improvement for many patients with prolonged grief, often more effectively than general depression treatment.

Other evidence-based approaches include grief-focused Cognitive Behavioural Therapy and trauma-focused therapies when the loss was traumatic. Supportive psychotherapy and grief groups can be valuable additions for many patients. The right approach depends on the person and the specific features of their situation.

Medication can play a supporting role when depression is part of the picture. Antidepressants do not treat grief itself but can help with the depressive symptoms that often accompany prolonged grief, making it easier to engage with grief-focused therapy. Medication is considered carefully and used alongside, not instead of, psychological treatment.

One of the most important messages of good grief care is that healing does not mean forgetting. Treatment does not aim to make you stop loving the person, stop remembering them, or stop missing them. It aims to help you carry the loss in a way that allows life to continue. The love does not have to disappear for the grief to loosen its grip. You can hold both — ongoing love and restored capacity to live — and this is what healing actually looks like.

How Bharosa Treats Complicated Grief

At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat complicated grief with warmth, skill, and patience. We understand that seeking help for grief can feel strange or even disloyal. We want you to know that it is not. It is a loving act toward yourself and toward the person you lost, who would almost certainly want you to find a way to live.

Treatment typically combines grief-focused psychological therapy, treatment of any co-occurring depression or trauma, and supportive care tailored to your specific situation. We work at the pace that suits you, and we treat your loss with the seriousness it deserves.

Patients who complete proper care for prolonged grief often describe a kind of emotional return — the return of the capacity to feel joy, to look forward, to laugh without feeling guilty, to carry their loss with love rather than with constant suffering. The relationship with the person who died continues, but it is a relationship the person can live with rather than live inside. This is what recovery from complicated grief looks like, and it is available in Hyderabad today.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How long is normal grief?

A: There is no exact time, but when intense grief does not soften after a year or more and prevents functioning, specialised help can make a difference.

Q: Does treating grief mean forgetting?

A: No. Treatment helps you carry the loss with love instead of constant suffering.

Q: Is prolonged grief the same as depression?

A: They overlap but are distinct. Grief-specific therapy addresses what depression treatment alone often does not.

Q: Can I seek help years after the loss?

A: Yes. Complicated grief responds to treatment even long after the loss.

Q: Does Bharosa treat complicated grief in Hyderabad?

A: Yes. Grief-focused care is available at our LB Nagar facility.

Love does not have to mean endless pain. Bharosa helps you carry loss and live again, in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.



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